Anonymous wrote:In my opinion, your DC will not want to live in this house as an adult.
My parents divorced when I was 17. My dad moved out, mom & I continued to live in the house.
I did not want to live in this house as an adult, when my mom offered it to me (she moved to FL). It held a lot of negative energy, a lot of memories of tension between my parents.
She sold it & gave me some money to put towards my downpayment on a condo that was 100% my choice. I really appreciate that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sounds miserable and unsustainable. You can’t really plan for your daughter. She and her future husband might want to live somewhere else. This is a family home on DH side? No mortgage?
+1, you honestly cannot predict where your daughters going to be in 15 or 20 years. It’s not realistic to keep this house for her.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’d put an in-law apartment on the property and live in that.
OP here. There is already a guest apartment on the property, currently used as my home office (I work from home). It is only 560 sq ft but it has a kitchen, bath, living room and a bedroom. I might just move there full-time.
Why doesn't he move in there?!!! Especially if he is mostly out of the home for work during the week anyway?
OP here. We already had an agreement that he would live in the guest apartment. He hated it there, because it "doesn't have a nice view like the main house." Now he took over the master suite, where even the bathroom has gorgeous panoramic views. I sleep in one of the upstairs secondary bedrooms, and lately my daughter started sleeping in my bed.
This is just the worst trolling.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’d put an in-law apartment on the property and live in that.
OP here. There is already a guest apartment on the property, currently used as my home office (I work from home). It is only 560 sq ft but it has a kitchen, bath, living room and a bedroom. I might just move there full-time.
Why doesn't he move in there?!!! Especially if he is mostly out of the home for work during the week anyway?
OP here. We already had an agreement that he would live in the guest apartment. He hated it there, because it "doesn't have a nice view like the main house." Now he took over the master suite, where even the bathroom has gorgeous panoramic views. I sleep in one of the upstairs secondary bedrooms, and lately my daughter started sleeping in my bed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sounds miserable and unsustainable. You can’t really plan for your daughter. She and her future husband might want to live somewhere else. This is a family home on DH side? No mortgage?
+1, you honestly cannot predict where your daughters going to be in 15 or 20 years. It’s not realistic to keep this house for her.
It’s insanely toxic. What happens when daughter is 30 and wants to live somewhere else and refuses the house?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’d put an in-law apartment on the property and live in that.
OP here. There is already a guest apartment on the property, currently used as my home office (I work from home). It is only 560 sq ft but it has a kitchen, bath, living room and a bedroom. I might just move there full-time.
Why doesn't he move in there?!!! Especially if he is mostly out of the home for work during the week anyway?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You are a psycho
Who stays to leave their daughter the house to live in with her husband????
You have to be a troll
One your daughter could like other girls are you ok with her marrying a woman and moving in?
Wth? Is wrong with you?
Your kid might never marry give. Your situation they are living in trans. Who thinks their kid will want to live in the house they grew up in forever ???
You have to be a troll
Hi, there. OP here. No, I am not a troll. My daughter is straight, plans to get married and have children. She loves our home, which is very conveniently located in a very desirable area.
We bought the house a few years ago, when mortgage rates were lower. I know our plan to turn over the house to our daughter when she has children sounds strange to Americans. We both come from a culture where the elderly vacate the main house and "retire to the cottage".
I plan to stay married after our daughter leaves for college for the following reason:
If we get divorced, the burden of managing my husband's things would fall on my daughter or a new wife. While he is a high earner, he is incapable of managing taxes, insurances, home repairs, investments, etc. I manage even his parents' care.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sounds miserable and unsustainable. You can’t really plan for your daughter. She and her future husband might want to live somewhere else. This is a family home on DH side? No mortgage?
+1, you honestly cannot predict where your daughters going to be in 15 or 20 years. It’s not realistic to keep this house for her.