Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Jack and Diane share a cute room on Blackish on ABC.
Jack and Diane are twins. OP's kids are 5 years apart.
LOVE Blackish!
Does it matter?
They don't have privacy curtains.
Just use the room for sleeping and storing clothing.
Two beds, two dressers, split the closet and put a nightstand between the beds.
What do you think families in NYC do? Europe? Anyplace where families squeeze into tiny apartments?
Except we are not in NYC or Europe.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Jack and Diane share a cute room on Blackish on ABC.
Jack and Diane are twins. OP's kids are 5 years apart.
LOVE Blackish!
Does it matter?
They don't have privacy curtains.
Just use the room for sleeping and storing clothing.
Two beds, two dressers, split the closet and put a nightstand between the beds.
What do you think families in NYC do? Europe? Anyplace where families squeeze into tiny apartments?
Anonymous wrote:I shared a room with 3 brothers. My sister came every other weekend. Honestly, it wasn't that big of a deal. We had bunk beds and the only thing the room was used for was sleep. This idea of kids needing their own rooms is a luxury of an affluent society. We found ways to have privacy when needed. Doesn't matter if it's same sex siblings sharing a room or opposite sex. My 3 kids (2 boys/1 girl) share a room. The oldest is in HS, younger two in MS.
For our kids, we got bunk beds (same beds my brothers and I used!). I got some sheer curtains, some PVC pipe and I 'curtained' the bunk beds. Kinda looks like mosquito netting. Each kid has shelf/table that holds a clock/tissue/water bottle. Each kid has a bed lamp clamped to the headboard, similar to this https://www.google.com/search?q=clamp+light+for+headboard&rlz=1CAHPZY_enUS572US572&espv=2&biw=1366&bih=678&source=lnms&tbm=isch&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwiEju7p88HRAhUC5SYKHVYJAYcQ_AUIBygC#imgrc=se8Qk3wGeJek7M%3A. The lamp is such that it shines only on the kid who wants it - it doesn't disturb the other kids.
The kids will lay on their beds, listen to music (thru headphones) or read a book on their bed but not much else. They've figured out how to get 'space' in our house that's not necessarily a bedroom. We have a homework table elsewhere in the house, kids aren't allowed to have laptops in their bedrooms, we have a cubby/staging area next to the homework table where backpacks, etc. go. That helps cut down on the clutter/junk. Definitely no TVs in the bedroom.
Do my kid wish they had their own rooms? Sure, they do. So did I growing up but it just wasn't going to happen. You know what was worse than sharing a room? Sharing a single bathroom! My kids have it so much better! We've got 2 bathrooms!
Anonymous wrote:I'm female. Shared a bedroom with my brother (20 months younger) all the way through college. No choice there.
Our parents gave us the master bedroom so it was bigger, and set it up with tall desks (think desks with shelves attached) and shelves all the way down the room. Whoever had the half closest to the door had less privacy but we eventually solved that with a sheet tacked to the ceiling.
The "wall" between the two halves ended about two feet below the ceiling.
We would have killed each other without that separation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Jack and Diane share a cute room on Blackish on ABC.
Jack and Diane are twins. OP's kids are 5 years apart.
LOVE Blackish!
Anonymous wrote:I shared a room with 3 brothers. My sister came every other weekend. Honestly, it wasn't that big of a deal. We had bunk beds and the only thing the room was used for was sleep. This idea of kids needing their own rooms is a luxury of an affluent society. We found ways to have privacy when needed. Doesn't matter if it's same sex siblings sharing a room or opposite sex. My 3 kids (2 boys/1 girl) share a room. The oldest is in HS, younger two in MS.
For our kids, we got bunk beds (same beds my brothers and I used!). I got some sheer curtains, some PVC pipe and I 'curtained' the bunk beds. Kinda looks like mosquito netting. Each kid has shelf/table that holds a clock/tissue/water bottle. Each kid has a bed lamp clamped to the headboard, similar to this https://www.google.com/search?q=clamp+light+for+headboard&rlz=1CAHPZY_enUS572US572&espv=2&biw=1366&bih=678&source=lnms&tbm=isch&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwiEju7p88HRAhUC5SYKHVYJAYcQ_AUIBygC#imgrc=se8Qk3wGeJek7M%3A. The lamp is such that it shines only on the kid who wants it - it doesn't disturb the other kids.
The kids will lay on their beds, listen to music (thru headphones) or read a book on their bed but not much else. They've figured out how to get 'space' in our house that's not necessarily a bedroom. We have a homework table elsewhere in the house, kids aren't allowed to have laptops in their bedrooms, we have a cubby/staging area next to the homework table where backpacks, etc. go. That helps cut down on the clutter/junk. Definitely no TVs in the bedroom.
Do my kid wish they had their own rooms? Sure, they do. So did I growing up but it just wasn't going to happen. You know what was worse than sharing a room? Sharing a single bathroom! My kids have it so much better! We've got 2 bathrooms!
Anonymous wrote:Jack and Diane share a cute room on Blackish on ABC.