Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No. My 15 yo will do an emergency load for himself on occasion if he has something specific he wants washed. But no, it just doesn’t make sense to do it that way in our household.
I don’t think it’s as common as dcum makes it out to be.
Agree. It makes more sense for us combine laundry, rather than do many small individual loads.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No. My 15 yo will do an emergency load for himself on occasion if he has something specific he wants washed. But no, it just doesn’t make sense to do it that way in our household.
I don’t think it’s as common as dcum makes it out to be.
Agree. It makes more sense for us combine laundry, rather than do many small individual loads.
This is fascinating to me. After a week of school/work, pajamas, working out/sports, each of us definitely at least one full load. No one is doing small individual loads.
Each person is responsible for the full lifecycle of their own laundry. Accountability for what goes well and what doesn’t. I have not helped anyone find a lost or dirty uniform in 3 years or so. Now that the kids wash their own clothes, they keep track of their items and there are no arguments about that. Everyone is happier.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No. My 15 yo will do an emergency load for himself on occasion if he has something specific he wants washed. But no, it just doesn’t make sense to do it that way in our household.
I don’t think it’s as common as dcum makes it out to be.
Agree. It makes more sense for us combine laundry, rather than do many small individual loads.
Anonymous wrote:When my son went away to college he had to help other kids figure out how to use the laundry machines in the dorms. He was shocked they had no life skills.
Anonymous wrote:No. My 15 yo will do an emergency load for himself on occasion if he has something specific he wants washed. But no, it just doesn’t make sense to do it that way in our household.
I don’t think it’s as common as dcum makes it out to be.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My boys do their own laundry and started at age 12. Do I enforce it being perfected folded and in drawers. Nope. So is there usually one dirty pile and one clean pile of clothes on their bedroom floors? Yep.
This is us too. I’m just not going to deal with a kid annoyed with me because a shirt turned pink or I forgot to move something to the dryer. They are fully capable and can be annoyed with themselves. We are strict about no food in bedrooms so I don’t get worked up about some clean clothes in a basket that go unfolded. It’s just messy, not dirty.
It only works because they don’t wear dirty clothes. If I had a kid who didn’t care, I would do their laundry.
Anonymous wrote:My boys do their own laundry and started at age 12. Do I enforce it being perfected folded and in drawers. Nope. So is there usually one dirty pile and one clean pile of clothes on their bedroom floors? Yep.
Anonymous wrote:My kids are 11 and 13 and have never done their own laundry. I thought this was normal, but over in another thread, most commenters are saying their kids have done their own laundry since they were tweens/teens. For context, I don't mind -- I telework and it's easy to throw some laundry in over the course of the day. As housework goes, I don't hate it. Also, I never did my own laundry as a kid. I had other chores but my parents did my laundry for me until I went to college. Do most kids transition to doing their own laundry at some point while still living at home?