Anonymous wrote:We have one DC who's a sophomore at UMCP, and our second child (and only other child) will likely also be attending an in-state school.
Dh and I have been eager to move for years, because neither of us like our house (tear down in MoCo) and we want to move to a lower cost area. We want to stay in Maryland but will probably look an hour or two from our current location.
Problem is that both kids are very attached to their friends in the immediate neighborhood and area. We've lived here since they were born and they have a tight group of very close friends. Older DC comes home regularly and hangs out with friends (holidays, over the summer).
DH and I would love to move as soon as younger son goes to college. We think that after sophomore year of college this really changes as kids start to do internships and spend less time at home but we're not sure. We also think kids could adapt and drive from new house to visit their friends, though it to our drive could make this hard.
What do others think – stay here for four more years in a house that we don't like at all (and will likely need to spend expensive repairs on), or move once younger son is a freshman and figure that they will adapt and that it won't be a big deal?
Based on your own experience as a young adult in college, and from what you've seen with other kids, how often do kids generally spend time with friends during college? How destabilizing would it be for them?
Anonymous wrote:My parents moved when I went away to college, problem was they didn’t tell me where they moved. I got over it.They will too, especially if you let them know where you moved.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My plan in this situation is to talk to my kid about it first.
And if your kid doesn’t like the idea, which I guarantee you they won’t, what will you do? Not move? That would be silly.
Anonymous wrote:I see this same predicament coming for us . I'm dying to move-I don't want to spend retirement in DC (or really another minute than I have to). There is just so much world out there that I want to experience.
My kids though are very attached to their neighborhood. My son in particular has been part of the same group of 6 friends since he was 4 years old. They're they're like old men--they eat breakfast together on the weekends, etc. if I uproot him he's going to be unmoored.
Anonymous wrote:My mom was always a little sad that her parents moved from her childhood home while she was in college. It was the childhood house itself/sense of home she missed, not the distance from high school friends. Same for my college boyfriend who once took me for a sentimental walk in his childhood Bethesda neighborhood.
Since you care about their emotions, you might consider moving in the summer so they can "say goodbye" properly.
In my opinion, a high school graduate is fully raised and you can move as soon as the younger graduates.
Keep in mind that today's young people are regularly in touch by phone and Internet and don't really need geographic proximity as much as pre-Millennials to stay connected in a daily sense. Also young people aren't as bored by driving as long term commuters. When I lived in the DMV, because I worked in DC, my boyfriend and friends were all 45 mins to 1 hour drive away due to being in harder to reach areas like Georgetown or on the opposite side of DC from me. It wasn't a big deal to make time to visit them.
Finally, you could tell your kids what you are thinking and see what they say.
Agreed that kids stay in touch with each other so much more than we know and so much easier than we did. And agree that young kids like road trips to visit friends. Good luck to you OP; I’m curious too regarding if the kids from HS all stay friends and socialize. For my son’s sake, I hope so. He’s a freshman in college, sees many HS friends on breaks and I know he misses the tightness they had. Still have it, but it changes over time I’m sure. Internships, girlfriends/boyfriends, jobs will all take them in different directions. But bonds will last and with your kids too. Talk to your kids….they might love the idea!
They will too, especially if you let them know where you moved.