Anonymous wrote:First, I would stop attributing ill motives to him. He may not have known about the money when you had the conversation, or maybe he's concerned his mom won't be reliable about giving him the money and is worried that without your help to cover the necessities, he'll be in a mind.
Second, I would wait and see how this year plays out under the current agreement. If he does end up getting all of the money and has plenty of spending money to spare, you can revisit the arrangement for next school year and see about easing up on the spending allowance you give him.
Finally, I would remember that he seems to be a good kid who's going into this in good faith. He presumably worked hard to get into this school, he doesn't appear to have questioned the small budget you set for spending money, and he's been working full time and saving his earnings to help cover his expenses as well. That's not a kid who's looking to freeload off you. Give him the benefit of the doubt and don't take out your frustrations with the ex on him.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:[actually three things!and also, good luck. You sound like a nice person.]
Thank you! And i'm going to remember "sometimes the cheapest way to pay for things is with money." I like that.
FWIW, his dad is the primary communicator on things like this. He just comes to me for the big financial decisions, which I appreciate. And DSS and him both come to me for the logistics, since that's mainly my household role.
I like the idea of treating the money from mom as just another stream of income. If it seems appropriate, I'll mention that to dad. He will ultimately decide how to handle this. And, yes, DSS knew about the money. My thought is that he was thinking about it very compartmentalized - he has his job earnings, money from dad, and money from mom. Since we really try to keep the financial arrangements between his mom and us behind the scenes, I doubt the interplay between dad's and mom's budget occurred to him. But, I do think he approached our financial conversation as a "negotiation" (there was a lot of, very calm, discussions on needs vs wants and a fair amount of compromise on both sides) I don't doubt he felt mentioning this money would weaken his position!
Anonymous wrote:[actually three things!and also, good luck. You sound like a nice person.]
and also, good luck. You sound like a nice person.]Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Could you ask him to account for the spending money from his mom? It might not be as extravagant as you think given costs near campus or other factors.
My stepson’s food budget looks outrageous on paper. I was shocked and sure that he was eating every meal out. He’s in law school, lives off campus, and can’t use a meal plan. When we visited, it turns out that all the grocery stores within walking distance or a short bus ride were WF or high end local organic (like Mom’s) and imported (think Balducci’s). To get to a regular grocery store, he has a long bus ride through a sketchy part of town and must Uber back. He also has very limited storage space in his shared kitchen. His housemates do eat out 3x a day. We are all together looking at other options for him, but for now, it’s just a lot of money.
OP here. I get what you're saying, but he's on campus with unlimited meal plan. Truly, he could manage without any spending money at all, but we don't expect that. The extra expenses we came up with were laundry, cleaning supplies for his bathroom, subway pass, phone allowance, and a small snack budget for the dorm.
Also, we said that he should track expenses and come to us if he felt he needed more money. This really was more an exercise in financial accountability. I was a little annoyed at him for not mentioning the extra money from his mom. But, I was much more annoyed at her since her stance was that she was contributing all that she could afford to tuition. If she had been upfront and said she would cover a certain amount of his living expenses too, it would not be a problem, but, finding out after the fact makes it more difficult.
Anonymous wrote:Could you ask him to account for the spending money from his mom? It might not be as extravagant as you think given costs near campus or other factors.
My stepson’s food budget looks outrageous on paper. I was shocked and sure that he was eating every meal out. He’s in law school, lives off campus, and can’t use a meal plan. When we visited, it turns out that all the grocery stores within walking distance or a short bus ride were WF or high end local organic (like Mom’s) and imported (think Balducci’s). To get to a regular grocery store, he has a long bus ride through a sketchy part of town and must Uber back. He also has very limited storage space in his shared kitchen. His housemates do eat out 3x a day. We are all together looking at other options for him, but for now, it’s just a lot of money.