Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's always interesting to hear different perspectives. For me, this would be a no brainer--of course she could stay with me and I would not expect compensation.
I have a tight circle of friends. I know their kids. Heck, I'm the emergency contact for some of them. I can't imagine saying no to a 22 yr old or an old friend.
I mean, congrats for being rich?
My budget doesn't afford feeding an adult for three months, or for paying for their hot water, their electricty, their dishwashing detergent, their ....
Are you seriously calling that person rich for offering a room?
Some people are less picky. We live in a large house and have multiple extra bedrooms. I would not want an extra person in the house unless we were already close.
A week? Sure. Whole summer? No way.
Yes, they are rich if they can take on the care of an adult for three months for free. Are you really this stupid?
Anonymous wrote:Wow. We always tell friends and families that their kids are more than welcome to stay with us for reasons like that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's always interesting to hear different perspectives. For me, this would be a no brainer--of course she could stay with me and I would not expect compensation.
I have a tight circle of friends. I know their kids. Heck, I'm the emergency contact for some of them. I can't imagine saying no to a 22 yr old or an old friend.
I mean, congrats for being rich?
My budget doesn't afford feeding an adult for three months, or for paying for their hot water, their electricty, their dishwashing detergent, their ....
Anonymous wrote:If you’d be willing to do it for $x/month, then say that—but it’s up to you.
If you did have her I would make clear it’s just a room and she is on her own for food/meals, for example.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's always interesting to hear different perspectives. For me, this would be a no brainer--of course she could stay with me and I would not expect compensation.
I have a tight circle of friends. I know their kids. Heck, I'm the emergency contact for some of them. I can't imagine saying no to a 22 yr old or an old friend.
I mean, congrats for being rich?
My budget doesn't afford feeding an adult for three months, or for paying for their hot water, their electricty, their dishwashing detergent, their ....
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's always interesting to hear different perspectives. For me, this would be a no brainer--of course she could stay with me and I would not expect compensation.
I have a tight circle of friends. I know their kids. Heck, I'm the emergency contact for some of them. I can't imagine saying no to a 22 yr old or an old friend.
I mean, congrats for being rich?
My budget doesn't afford feeding an adult for three months, or for paying for their hot water, their electricty, their dishwashing detergent, their ....
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The answer is no. Your home is not a hotel. Their child’s housing for the Summer is not your problem.
I also would never ask this of anyone. Wouldn’t be offended if you declined.
+1. Plus, if she’s so smart that she received this prestigious internship, it should be on her, the student, to figure out housing. It’s not mommy’s problem to solve.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The answer is no. Your home is not a hotel. Their child’s housing for the Summer is not your problem.
I also would never ask this of anyone. Wouldn’t be offended if you declined.
Such a typically DCUM nasty hiding behind the keyboard response. People don't act like this in real life, thank God.
Seriously. I can think of at least a dozen close friends of either mine or my spouse whose kids I'd be happy to host, and who I'd feel comfortable asking to host one of our kids.
There are plenty of reasons why it might not work, and everyone would be OK with that. But "my home is not a hotel . . . it isn't my problem" would never, ever enter the equation.
Do you people *have* any close friends?
Anonymous wrote:Personally, I’d make a list of rules and expectations and ask them to sign. If they violate a rule, decide now what the consequences would be. Stick to it. It is a shame there’s no compensation.