Anonymous wrote:In my house, we saved for education—not for an individual child. If one child’s school cost more than another, DH and I determined what would work. For an athletic kid, how much $$ did you spend on travel teams, trainers, overnight weekend travel and meals? What about the wear and tear on the car? Should the other child insist that you even up? You have an entitled kid on your hands that expects a handout. Fair is not always even.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I totally disagree that DS#2 should get the money. School is what it is and when all grad schools are over then split the leftover equally or pass down for grandchildren. Kids should never have been brought into the funding discussion unless there was a certain cost that could not have been supported. And I say this as a person whose parents paid for my sister #1 law school and sister #2 medical school. In any event, nice problem to have!
So you’re saying hard work don’t matter? It is extremely hard to get an athletic scholarship.
The other child probably worked really hard in other ways.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I totally disagree that DS#2 should get the money. School is what it is and when all grad schools are over then split the leftover equally or pass down for grandchildren. Kids should never have been brought into the funding discussion unless there was a certain cost that could not have been supported. And I say this as a person whose parents paid for my sister #1 law school and sister #2 medical school. In any event, nice problem to have!
So you’re saying hard work don’t matter? It is extremely hard to get an athletic scholarship.
Anonymous wrote:In my house, we saved for education—not for an individual child. If one child’s school cost more than another, DH and I determined what would work. For an athletic kid, how much $$ did you spend on travel teams, trainers, overnight weekend travel and meals? What about the wear and tear on the car? Should the other child insist that you even up? You have an entitled kid on your hands that expects a handout. Fair is not always even.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The kids shouldn’t know the details of your savings. It’s not their money. I think it’s crazy to give one son a huge sum of money! When the boys graduate they should be focused on getting jobs and working their way up the ladder.
In the immediate future I would focus on rebuilding your relationships. Take the family on some nice vacations a few times a year. Do this forever, even when the boys are married and have families. Make it your treat.
I agree that money is yours. You earmarked it for certain purposes. Did you keep track of your expenses supporting #2 athletics over the years? If one has a big medical need you help with do you offer the other cash? What if one has kids and the other doesn't. Life is just not equal.
Anonymous wrote:I totally disagree that DS#2 should get the money. School is what it is and when all grad schools are over then split the leftover equally or pass down for grandchildren. Kids should never have been brought into the funding discussion unless there was a certain cost that could not have been supported. And I say this as a person whose parents paid for my sister #1 law school and sister #2 medical school. In any event, nice problem to have!
Anonymous wrote:The kids shouldn’t know the details of your savings. It’s not their money. I think it’s crazy to give one son a huge sum of money! When the boys graduate they should be focused on getting jobs and working their way up the ladder.
In the immediate future I would focus on rebuilding your relationships. Take the family on some nice vacations a few times a year. Do this forever, even when the boys are married and have families. Make it your treat.