Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm an older millennial. I love my kids and plan to fully pay for their undergrad and buy them a car at 18. The buck stops there. No way are they living with me as adults. None of them have special needs. I moved out for college at 18 and only came home for Christmas breaks, lined up a job at graduation (because I chose a sensible major and did internships) and moved into an apartment. I expect the same of my kids and NFW I am going to create a dependent relationship between us after they graduate college. I personally view that as bad parenting, but this is just my opinion, passed down to me from my own parents. I respect that other cultures do it differently. I don't, however, respect adults who feel entitled to live with their parents.
I hope they cut you off as soon as you kick them out.
Really? My parents sent me away for college and I never moved back home accept over some winter breaks. I tell them all the time how grateful I am for everything they did for me, especially my expensive education. When we go out to dinner, we insist on buying. We host them over the holidays. We talk on the phone a couple times a week. My mom, sister and I take a girls' trip once a year, and I make it a point to meet up with my dad and do things he enjoys with him. These are the parents who "kicked me out" when I was 18. The ones I didn't feel entitled to mooch off of after I graduated college.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm an older millennial. I love my kids and plan to fully pay for their undergrad and buy them a car at 18. The buck stops there. No way are they living with me as adults. None of them have special needs. I moved out for college at 18 and only came home for Christmas breaks, lined up a job at graduation (because I chose a sensible major and did internships) and moved into an apartment. I expect the same of my kids and NFW I am going to create a dependent relationship between us after they graduate college. I personally view that as bad parenting, but this is just my opinion, passed down to me from my own parents. I respect that other cultures do it differently. I don't, however, respect adults who feel entitled to live with their parents.
I hope they cut you off as soon as you kick them out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My son will turn 29 in one month. Still living here with us. Your short lived record.
+1. Mine is 30, finishing his PhD and saving most of his earnings. He will move out after graduation with a nice nest egg.
So $300, $400?
Anonymous wrote:I'm an older millennial. I love my kids and plan to fully pay for their undergrad and buy them a car at 18. The buck stops there. No way are they living with me as adults. None of them have special needs. I moved out for college at 18 and only came home for Christmas breaks, lined up a job at graduation (because I chose a sensible major and did internships) and moved into an apartment. I expect the same of my kids and NFW I am going to create a dependent relationship between us after they graduate college. I personally view that as bad parenting, but this is just my opinion, passed down to me from my own parents. I respect that other cultures do it differently. I don't, however, respect adults who feel entitled to live with their parents.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm an older millennial. I love my kids and plan to fully pay for their undergrad and buy them a car at 18. The buck stops there. No way are they living with me as adults. None of them have special needs. I moved out for college at 18 and only came home for Christmas breaks, lined up a job at graduation (because I chose a sensible major and did internships) and moved into an apartment. I expect the same of my kids and NFW I am going to create a dependent relationship between us after they graduate college. I personally view that as bad parenting, but this is just my opinion, passed down to me from my own parents. I respect that other cultures do it differently. I don't, however, respect adults who feel entitled to live with their parents.
Like I said, I didn't want to live with my parents. It's just that me understanding how important it was to be self-supporting enough. My prospective employers had to value it too, and it didn't seem like most of them die. They didn't seem to understand how the wheel of life was supposed to work.
Anonymous wrote:I'm an older millennial. I love my kids and plan to fully pay for their undergrad and buy them a car at 18. The buck stops there. No way are they living with me as adults. None of them have special needs. I moved out for college at 18 and only came home for Christmas breaks, lined up a job at graduation (because I chose a sensible major and did internships) and moved into an apartment. I expect the same of my kids and NFW I am going to create a dependent relationship between us after they graduate college. I personally view that as bad parenting, but this is just my opinion, passed down to me from my own parents. I respect that other cultures do it differently. I don't, however, respect adults who feel entitled to live with their parents.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My son will turn 29 in one month. Still living here with us. Your short lived record.
+1. Mine is 30, finishing his PhD and saving most of his earnings. He will move out after graduation with a nice nest egg.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:mine is 30. she told me that she is coming to live with me if she gets laid off on wednesday. yippee!
If she gets laid off? Well, I daren't get my hopes up.
Anonymous wrote:Why didn't you save or use the money you earned to pay for graduate school?