Anonymous wrote:Haha glad I’m not the only one with a snarky teen selectively obsessed with cleanliness.
Anonymous wrote:She owns 7-8 laundry loads worth of clothes??!?
Anonymous wrote:(Scene setting: DD graduates from HS. She's been overwhelmed in recent weeks with finals, etc. and got WAY behind on laundry. We're talking like seven or eight loads. She finally got working on picking up her room (the clothes were strewn everywhere -- you couldn't see the floor). Since she was making an effort, I took pity and decided to help (since I know she will soon ask me for money to buy clothes for college and my position is I'm not giving you anything until you go through what you already have and decide what to keep/what to donate, etc).
Anyway, this scene just played out:
(DD walks in from garage, where she was just back from running a graduation-related errand. She looks disdainfully at the piles of folded clothing I've arranged on the kitchen island, which I cleaned previously.)
DD:
Dad, I appreciate you doing my laundry, but can you NOT put it on the disgusting counter?
(DD proceeds to walk to sink and drink directly from the faucet.)
AND SCENE
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OMG I so relate. My college freshman is home and there are so many times when I have offered to do something for her and she says “OK.” No, my dear, say “thank you,” goddamnit!
Also she took a bath upstairs right before we left to go away for the weekend, and not only did she forget to pull the plug, she left the faucet dripping a tiny bit. If I hadn’t noticed before we left we would have come back on Sunday to a several hundred thousand dollar problem with the entire bathroom sitting in the kitchen.
drama queen much?
? no, that's not being a drama queen. For all you know, the bathtub could've been pretty full, and the drip pretty big = flooding in the bathroom = damaged wood and $$$ on fixing it.
Bathtubs have overflow drains so just…no.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OMG I so relate. My college freshman is home and there are so many times when I have offered to do something for her and she says “OK.” No, my dear, say “thank you,” goddamnit!
Also she took a bath upstairs right before we left to go away for the weekend, and not only did she forget to pull the plug, she left the faucet dripping a tiny bit. If I hadn’t noticed before we left we would have come back on Sunday to a several hundred thousand dollar problem with the entire bathroom sitting in the kitchen.
drama queen much?
? no, that's not being a drama queen. For all you know, the bathtub could've been pretty full, and the drip pretty big = flooding in the bathroom = damaged wood and $$$ on fixing it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OMG I so relate. My college freshman is home and there are so many times when I have offered to do something for her and she says “OK.” No, my dear, say “thank you,” goddamnit!
Also she took a bath upstairs right before we left to go away for the weekend, and not only did she forget to pull the plug, she left the faucet dripping a tiny bit. If I hadn’t noticed before we left we would have come back on Sunday to a several hundred thousand dollar problem with the entire bathroom sitting in the kitchen.
drama queen much?
Anonymous wrote:I don’t think my household of 3 people could get a backlog of 8 loads of laundry if we tried. Maybe once one counted in bed and bath linens.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Stop doing her laundry. Now.
I do agree that the kitchen island is a weird and potentially gross place to put laundry.
Meh. I don't normally, but things are out of control. It's a one-time thing.
Anonymous wrote:OMG I so relate. My college freshman is home and there are so many times when I have offered to do something for her and she says “OK.” No, my dear, say “thank you,” goddamnit!
Also she took a bath upstairs right before we left to go away for the weekend, and not only did she forget to pull the plug, she left the faucet dripping a tiny bit. If I hadn’t noticed before we left we would have come back on Sunday to a several hundred thousand dollar problem with the entire bathroom sitting in the kitchen.