Anonymous wrote:I’m big on “18 doesn’t make you an adult” BUT I’m team niece here.
An 18 year old high school student living at home and expecting mom and dad to cough up $100K ++ for college tuition needs to follow house rules.
An 18 year old with mental health issues must get treatment.
But an 18 year old with a job and a place to live does not need to follow anyone’s rules on cell phone usage or beach trips!
I’m wondering if this is the teen writing and skewing the real issue. This post doesn’t pass the smell test for me.
Dear teen, do you have a part time job and you are temporarily living with a friend? Doesn’t count. Do you have an actual full time job with benefits? Go enjoy your life.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She’s 18 and not taking their money, so they can’t actually stop her. How is she supporting herself?
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Anonymous wrote:parents doesn’t mean they are free to do whatever they want.
Ever since my niece turned 18 2 months ago she decided she no longer had to abide by her parent’s rules as long as she was refusing financial help from them. She stayed out all night and refused to come home for days, claiming my sister and her husband are too controlling like setting a curfew or limits on cell phones. She bought her own cell phone to skirt her parents reasonable restrictions on the cell phone like most parents of teens do. She kept insisting she didn't have to follow her parents rules regarding the cell phone because she paid for the cell phone herself and is refusing financial help from her parents.
My niece plans to take a week trip to Myrtle beach with her friends on Monday and there will be no adult supervision. No matter how many times her parents told her no she insists she will do it and her parents can’t tell her what to do because she refuses their financial support. Shes not even living with them but her parents often stop by but she starts yelling at them to go away. The problem is she makes very irresponsible decisions like going into large crowds during a pandemic or sleeping around with random men some who have criminal records. I told her part of being an adult is acting like one and making responsible decisions. “iM eIgHtEeN i CaN dO wHaT i WaNt” is not being an adult.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, what culture did you grow up in that you don’t understand that adults are adults once they turn 18 and are allowed to do whatever they want if they’re not financially dependent on or living with parents?
Yeah, if not a troll, OP is clearly originally from another country and refuses to understand that the niece is American and all this nonsense about curfews and phones OP is spewing is meaningless and absurd to an American adult.
OP here. We are American, born and raised and so were our parents.