Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Suburbia is very different from living in the city. It will be a huge adjustment. Very different pace, lifestyle, etc. Be 100% sure your kids are on board.
12 is when your kid starts hitting the sweet spot. They can start going places on their own. In suburbia that is the age where you as the parent will be constantly driving them to a friend's place, to sports, etc. Except they won't have friends. It is not easy to be the new kid.
Is their current school really that bad? You really should have thought about this after elementary school at the latest. Dropped the ball. Don't double down and make it worse.
How about boarding school?
JFC you are an a******
Seriously. Get therapy. What kind of thing is this to say to someone.
Anonymous wrote:Suburbia is very different from living in the city. It will be a huge adjustment. Very different pace, lifestyle, etc. Be 100% sure your kids are on board.
12 is when your kid starts hitting the sweet spot. They can start going places on their own. In suburbia that is the age where you as the parent will be constantly driving them to a friend's place, to sports, etc. Except they won't have friends. It is not easy to be the new kid.
Is their current school really that bad? You really should have thought about this after elementary school at the latest. Dropped the ball. Don't double down and make it worse.
How about boarding school?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As somebody who made this move the other direction: I’d echo everyone’s concerns but also add that suburbs are *very* cliquish; a huge percent of kids / families are lifers, there isn’t any equivalent to an entry year at a private school where you have a big influx of new people. So particularly for the one-year experiment you’re contemplating, it’s going to be very difficult to break in socially in a meaningful way, and your experience there is going to be much worse for that absence.
I find it like being back in middle school. I moved from the city and the suburban moms can’t stand me. No idea what I did or didn’t do. Never experienced this before. They are very focused on town gossip, kids sports, etc and the world seems very small. I’d only move if you’re okay not making friends.
The only way to make friends is if your kid is a really good athlete, preferably in a team sport. Then they can immediately make friends through the team, the team is happy to have them as they will get better (unless your kid steals someone's spot) and all is well in the world (assuming you like the parents but it is better than nothing). Otherwise, good luck.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As somebody who made this move the other direction: I’d echo everyone’s concerns but also add that suburbs are *very* cliquish; a huge percent of kids / families are lifers, there isn’t any equivalent to an entry year at a private school where you have a big influx of new people. So particularly for the one-year experiment you’re contemplating, it’s going to be very difficult to break in socially in a meaningful way, and your experience there is going to be much worse for that absence.
I find it like being back in middle school. I moved from the city and the suburban moms can’t stand me. No idea what I did or didn’t do. Never experienced this before. They are very focused on town gossip, kids sports, etc and the world seems very small. I’d only move if you’re okay not making friends.
Anonymous wrote:I hate to say this but what about NYC public schools? There are some good schools and maybe even some that are better than your private. Then no tuition and no commute and paying for two places to live
Anonymous wrote:As somebody who made this move the other direction: I’d echo everyone’s concerns but also add that suburbs are *very* cliquish; a huge percent of kids / families are lifers, there isn’t any equivalent to an entry year at a private school where you have a big influx of new people. So particularly for the one-year experiment you’re contemplating, it’s going to be very difficult to break in socially in a meaningful way, and your experience there is going to be much worse for that absence.
Anonymous wrote:Seaport from westchester sounds horrible. Don’t do that to yourselves. And if you do, definitely keep the apartment because there’s a good chance you’re moving back.
Anonymous wrote:Op - dh works in seaport.
I am thinking that dh can stay in city 2 nights a week so commute less bad. I might do one night. Commute is really not optimal but bleeding $140k a year on tuition ($270k pre tax income) is keeping us trapped and ds is not on a path to t1 high school. This way I figure if we like it we can buy there and then that outlay goes into sellable asset rather than mid tier school with no clear roi
Anonymous wrote:Seaport from westchester sounds horrible. Don’t do that to yourselves. And if you do, definitely keep the apartment because there’s a good chance you’re moving back.