Anonymous wrote:DH and his siblings were told they could not stay at home after they graduated from HS. They all had to enroll in some form of post secondary education. IL's were paying the bills, though.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not unusual, but honestly going to college doesn't seem like "moving out" to me. Its like the summer camp equivalent of moving out or the study abroad equivalent of being an expat. Sort of cosplay adulthood. I am not knocking it obviously but its less "real world". Even though I paid for my crappy summer rentals and what not, I didn't feel "moved out" until I graduated and got a FT job and rented by own (slightly nicer ) apartment with my roommate.
I agree, I wouldn't count going to college as moving out. You still come home on breaks, the summer, presumably have Mom and Dad supporting you financially. To me, "moving out" is you are on your own for the most part. Not an inbetween step like college.
How privileged of you. Many people pay for their own college. So no, it's not an in-between step.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Going to college is not really moving out. Unless you moved out to support yourself 100% by working, your “moved out at 18” experience doesn’t count.
+1
If parents are paying for college, then college is like a all inclusive paid vacation for the kids.
Anonymous wrote:Going to college is not really moving out. Unless you moved out to support yourself 100% by working, your “moved out at 18” experience doesn’t count.
Anonymous wrote:I must be really old. I remember when this was the norm, and it was unusual NOT to move out at 18.
OP, are you specifically talking about an 18yo who is still in high school, moving out partway through their senior year? That's the only situation that I can think of this as slightly unusual.
Anonymous wrote:My two oldest kids moved to college across the country at 16. One turned 17 days later. The other turned 17 three months after moving into the dorm.
Anonymous wrote:I moved out at 17 and went to college. I left nothing at home, I paid for my own college. I went from college to law school, to an apartment I paid to rent, to a home I bought with my husband, to the home we now bought and raise our kids in. I never stepped foot back in my childhood home except to visit on holidays during college. When I graduated college, my parents moved to FL. I never said "goodbye" to my old house. I'd say I moved out at 17.
Anonymous wrote:My daughter moved halfway across the country from us when she was 17 and a half. She moved in with her older brother and sister-in-law, finished school and graduated, and has never asked us for any money. She moved out of their house when she turned 18.
I raise my kids to be independent. When my youngest turns 18 in 2 and a half years, I am moving out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I moved out at 17 and went to college. I left nothing at home, I paid for my own college. I went from college to law school, to an apartment I paid to rent, to a home I bought with my husband, to the home we now bought and raise our kids in. I never stepped foot back in my childhood home except to visit on holidays during college. When I graduated college, my parents moved to FL. I never said "goodbye" to my old house. I'd say I moved out at 17.
What did you do during the summers during college? (Or do you count this as a holiday?)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not unusual, but honestly going to college doesn't seem like "moving out" to me. Its like the summer camp equivalent of moving out or the study abroad equivalent of being an expat. Sort of cosplay adulthood. I am not knocking it obviously but its less "real world". Even though I paid for my crappy summer rentals and what not, I didn't feel "moved out" until I graduated and got a FT job and rented by own (slightly nicer ) apartment with my roommate.
I agree, I wouldn't count going to college as moving out. You still come home on breaks, the summer, presumably have Mom and Dad supporting you financially. To me, "moving out" is you are on your own for the most part. Not an inbetween step like college.