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I treat it as roommate courtesy. It's not trying to be controlling. Just trying to be respectful of everyone you share a living space with.
For me: I'd like to know when he expects to be home and to text if that changes. The text won't wake me, but if I wake and get worried, the text will let me know he's fine because plans changed. Pick up after himself in common areas. No overnight hookup guests. (He better not be doing that, but it's definately not allowed in my house). Long term girlfriends ok. He does his own laundry. No need to ask for that. He helps out with family chores as needed. But he's also willing to do that, so it's also not a fight. And by that I mean things like yard work, loading the dishwasher, emptying it if it's done, cleaning up any weird mess he makes. |
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1) Curfew is 10PM, 7 days a week.
2) No drugs, no tobacco, no alcohol in the house 3) You are expected to work 40hrs every week, whether in a professional setting for fast food/what ever. 4) Rent, water, utilities due first of every month. 5) Your goal is aquiring a job that allows you to move out. |
This is a college student -- did you read the post? Why would you impose a curfew? |
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I remember going through this the hard way my first summer back from college. After that, I always got a job and paid rent in someone's super cheap sublet.
I was (and still am, at 44 ) a good kid. But in college, I wanted to stay out late and I did. I slept in as I wanted. And I had a massive crush/boyfriend who I did not sleep with at home, but sometimes I stayed over at his place.
This put a great deal of stress on my parents who had to younger kids at home that they wanted to keep following their rules (curfews, sleeping at boys' houses, chores, schedules, participating in family weekend activities, and so on). So me coming back home all of a sudden wanting completely different rules apply to me rules threw off their game and the family dynamic. And after a big fight and cool-off discussion about it, I understood their point of view. It wasn't reasonable for me to think of my parents' and younger siblings' home as my dorm. Because it wasn't. It couldn't be. |
| **PP here. Sorry about all the crappy typos. I'm tired but insomniac tonight. Boo. |
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LOL @ pp with the 10pm curfew.
No curfew. Courtesy text if not coming hone. Clean up after yourself including laundry. Meals will be ready at X time. If you are here fine. Don't expect another meal. Help out when needed. |
| We have one recent college grad and one current college student (plus our youngest who's about to graduate from high school). Honestly, we've never had issues with them coming home for breaks or summer. They've always had work or volunteer gigs set up for themselves, which makes it easier. Still, there's usually a period of adjustment over the first few days that they're home, but we've found that we can just talk things through without a lot of formal rules. Our kids are basically respectful, responsible and kind people (except when they were in that crazy teen phase in 10th grade; fortunately, they emerged from that --phew!). It's fun to have them home when they're here, and we love seeing their friends. |
Do you still pick out his outfit each morning, too? |
Rules to ensure kids move far, far away. |