Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can you tell him to stop bringing his girlfriend home and to events. My kids aren't that old yet but I'm already annoyed thinking about the possibility.
No you don’t tell your child to treat a person they love like sh!t.
But you enable this serious of a relationship at 21? If they were 25, fine, but 21 is too young to be going home to mom and dad’s house together.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can you tell him to stop bringing his girlfriend home and to events. My kids aren't that old yet but I'm already annoyed thinking about the possibility.
Of course a parent can do that, and it's excellent strategy to build a relationship with your adult kid where they want limited contact with you
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can you tell him to stop bringing his girlfriend home and to events. My kids aren't that old yet but I'm already annoyed thinking about the possibility.
No you don’t tell your child to treat a person they love like sh!t.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can you tell him to stop bringing his girlfriend home and to events. My kids aren't that old yet but I'm already annoyed thinking about the possibility.
Of course a parent can do that, and it's excellent strategy to build a relationship with your adult kid where they want limited contact with you
Anonymous wrote:Can you tell him to stop bringing his girlfriend home and to events. My kids aren't that old yet but I'm already annoyed thinking about the possibility.
Anonymous wrote:Can you tell him to stop bringing his girlfriend home and to events. My kids aren't that old yet but I'm already annoyed thinking about the possibility.
Anonymous wrote:Separate bedrooms are just a matter of principle nothing more. By the way, how come people with more kids and less bedrooms handle it?
Anonymous wrote:Separate rooms while I am paying tuition. My house is not their love nest. If they are sneaking into rooms, the bf/gf will not be invited again.
Anonymous wrote:Separate. They take trips together and stay in the same hotel room, but they are paying for it, not me. And it's outside my control. But, when I'm paying (we stayed at a hotel for a wedding), they stay in separate rooms. I have a younger DD and don't want to set the wrong example.
Anonymous wrote:Separate rooms while I am paying tuition. My house is not their love nest. If they are sneaking into rooms, the bf/gf will not be invited again.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We made up the guest room and let them decide ( first visit dd stayed in her own room; 2nd, 3rd and 4th she stayed in guest room with bf). By the time we met DD’s bf they had done a 100 mile backpacking trip together and also traveled all over Europe. Requiring them to be in separate rooms would have been ( IMO) kinda disrespectful to the connection they had built with each other. They’re not together anymore but no regrets.
That was a situationship, not a connection if they aren't together or friends anymore.