Anonymous wrote:This is wild to me. I grew up in a two bedroom, one floor condo. We would just hang out in the living room. My mom did not hide anywhere. She would go about her business and we would do our own thing. I would never have considered my mom moving so I could hang out that’s beyond nuts.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our 9th grade daughter does not like to host at our house. She says it's because there is no where to hang out. We do not have a dedicated hangout spot, like a family room or finished basement, or even a porch/patio. Our house is an older 2 story 3bd/1ba and we have a small kitchen, LR and DR with the bedrooms upstairs. Our basement cannot really be finished, but DD does have her own small room. There is maybe room for one sleeping bag on the floor (barely!), so she could invite a friend over to spend the night. We have a small extra bedroom that we use as a craft room/office/storage.
She invited a friend over a couple times in middle school and I just hid in my bedroom and let DD have the main level to socialize. That's kind of annoying for the parents though!
Our house is paid for, but I'm kind of bothered by this. For instance, for homecoming, I dropped her off at a friend's house where about eight girls gathered to get ready. We obviously could never do something like this. I'm wondering if it's worth moving for this reason. We could afford a house that costs about 100-200K more than ours is worth. That would probably get us either a finished basement, extra bathroom or extra family room in the same area we live now. Would it be worth it? She will be off to college in a few years. Is this even important when they are able to drive and get around by themselves in a year or two?
We would probably have to get a mortgage for the higher costs. I'm kind of wincing at that given the interest rates, but I also want DD to feel comfortable in our home. Despite the size, our house has some positive qualities (aside from no mortgage!) that I would hate to give up. I do get it though, I grew up in a small house with a large family and I never invited anyone over. We bought our house before having a kid and DH thinks this is a silly reason to move, but is willing to upgrade.
My son was the same way. I think it’s because we don’t allow kids to drink alcohol. He was very popular still and even though it hurt a bit we got used to it and our house certainly was not getting trashed. When younger up until 9th he had 6-7 kids sleeping over on the weekends. It was nice but a lot of work and cleaning up. I tried to think of that when it made me sad.
Anonymous wrote:Are you serious? Do not move for that. Most kids aka friends do not care where you live as long as you are cool. We live in a 2bdr condo, in an apartment-style building. I've had 6 boys last weekend. So I hid in my bedroom at one point then I went out for coffee. Whatever.
Anonymous wrote:Our 9th grade daughter does not like to host at our house. She says it's because there is no where to hang out. We do not have a dedicated hangout spot, like a family room or finished basement, or even a porch/patio. Our house is an older 2 story 3bd/1ba and we have a small kitchen, LR and DR with the bedrooms upstairs. Our basement cannot really be finished, but DD does have her own small room. There is maybe room for one sleeping bag on the floor (barely!), so she could invite a friend over to spend the night. We have a small extra bedroom that we use as a craft room/office/storage.
She invited a friend over a couple times in middle school and I just hid in my bedroom and let DD have the main level to socialize. That's kind of annoying for the parents though!
Our house is paid for, but I'm kind of bothered by this. For instance, for homecoming, I dropped her off at a friend's house where about eight girls gathered to get ready. We obviously could never do something like this. I'm wondering if it's worth moving for this reason. We could afford a house that costs about 100-200K more than ours is worth. That would probably get us either a finished basement, extra bathroom or extra family room in the same area we live now. Would it be worth it? She will be off to college in a few years. Is this even important when they are able to drive and get around by themselves in a year or two?
We would probably have to get a mortgage for the higher costs. I'm kind of wincing at that given the interest rates, but I also want DD to feel comfortable in our home. Despite the size, our house has some positive qualities (aside from no mortgage!) that I would hate to give up. I do get it though, I grew up in a small house with a large family and I never invited anyone over. We bought our house before having a kid and DH thinks this is a silly reason to move, but is willing to upgrade.
. Waiting for 3 years when we are empty nest before updating. It would cause too much disruption right now.