Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it's ok, even healthy, to have some basic rules. I'll be trying to figure that out this summer with my new graduate. Asking your adult son to be considerate of your need to sleep is certainly not ridiculous and neither is expecting him to help out around the house.
Ok, but a bedtime for a college student? Yeah, that’s ridiculous.
Anonymous wrote:Stop focusing on the bedtime and instead on the roommate behaviors:
—He didn’t empty the dishwasher. There’s a basic expectation that he will contribute to the maintenance of the household.
—He woke you up by moving around the house while others were sleeping. This was more than someone getting up in the middle of the night to pee. He can stay up to any hour; he just needs to be able to be silent when moving around the house between 11pm - 6:30am
—Basic kindness. It’s not okay to be crabby & rude to the people you live with. If there is something that is causing that behavior in your son, it’s up to him to regulate.
I’d have no problem vacuuming, playing music and hammering nails so I could hang pictures during the mid-morning hours. That’s a reasonable time to expect people are awake. He can adjust his sleep if that noise is interrupting his sleep.
Anonymous wrote:I think it's ok, even healthy, to have some basic rules. I'll be trying to figure that out this summer with my new graduate. Asking your adult son to be considerate of your need to sleep is certainly not ridiculous and neither is expecting him to help out around the house.