Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:our kids are 29, 25, and 22. still bank-rolling their lives. it's like having a dental procedure that never ends.
Haha. What do you think contributed to being 3 for 3 on failure to launch?
probably failure to cut the cords on our part... but, seriously, 2 are still in school (phd and md programs), the oldest one got his phd and doing his postdoc work so we are still happy to help him out here and there. it's not causing us financial stress.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:our kids are 29, 25, and 22. still bank-rolling their lives. it's like having a dental procedure that never ends.
Haha. What do you think contributed to being 3 for 3 on failure to launch?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:our kids are 29, 25, and 22. still bank-rolling their lives. it's like having a dental procedure that never ends.
Haha. What do you think contributed to being 3 for 3 on failure to launch?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:our kids are 29, 25, and 22. still bank-rolling their lives. it's like having a dental procedure that never ends.
Haha. What do you think contributed to being 3 for 3 on failure to launch?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't have adult children, but I am an adult from a large family. Why do you just want the parent perspective?
As a member of my family, we make an effort to get together in a central location for holidays. It usually works, although sometimes only 3 out of 4 of us can make it. Sometimes we'll get together with just one other family, or take a vacation just me and my sister's family. I think this is a pretty normal dynamic. We are close, and try to spend time with our parents all together or in groups when we can.
OP: trying to decide how many kids to have and if we should keep going
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am an adult child and I know my family dynamic.
We all live in different states and rarely coordinate visits. We managed to all make it to a graduation this year and that was a miracle.
My two older brothers don't talk, one doesn't want to be in the room with the other. My younger brother makes an attempt but doesn't like my older brothers and their kids drive him crazy, all adults now.
I am the only one who talks to everyone.
My Mother and Father are not happy with the dynamic and my Mom wonders where she went wrong.
Other than the occasional high-schooler trolling th eBoomers, every single person on DCUM is an adult child. This is not some sort of special credential.
I guess I felt the need to share that I was not the parent but the sibling and I can still talk to my family dynamics.
Notwithstanding the fact that OP didn't ask you. Thanks for sharing, though.
Anonymous wrote:What’s it like being the parent of adult children? Wondering what it’s like if you have a large family... is it impossible to get everyone together? Does everyone get along? It it too costly to travel and visit everyone? Did everyone stay close or move far away?
Anonymous wrote:OP: I read an article that said most people limit the # of kids they have because they only think about the hard years (young kids) but that having a lot of adult children is great, so wondering if that is true. Or if it’s more of a pain to have to travel and get together.
Anonymous wrote:our kids are 29, 25, and 22. still bank-rolling their lives. it's like having a dental procedure that never ends.
Anonymous wrote:I don't have adult children, but I am an adult from a large family. Why do you just want the parent perspective?
As a member of my family, we make an effort to get together in a central location for holidays. It usually works, although sometimes only 3 out of 4 of us can make it. Sometimes we'll get together with just one other family, or take a vacation just me and my sister's family. I think this is a pretty normal dynamic. We are close, and try to spend time with our parents all together or in groups when we can.