Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My friend had a baby at age 50. She is now 62 with a 12 year old. Retirement communities typically will not accept kids.
goodness. Surrogate? Adopted?
DH and I had gone out for a walk and heard a baby crying. We said, "We haven't heard that in a while." Our kids are in HS. I said to DH that while I miss how cute our kids were when they were younger, I would never want to go back to those years again. It was hard enough in my 30s. I can't imagine trying to raise a baby/toddler at my age, and I'm 52.
It feels different if you are finally getting the chance to do it for the first time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A lot of people can't handle the stairs past a certain age. Both my mom and MIL (in their 80s) have a problem with stairs. My mom moved to a ranch when she was in her 60s. They knew stairs was going to be an issue eventually so why wait.
My MIL, oth, was adamant that she could handle the stairs and refused to move when she was in her 60s. FFW to 80, and she was having issues, but she still did nothing to move. We've all been telling her to move for the past 10 years. She finally made the move, but it was more painful than it had to be. She couldn't do anything herself so she had to rely on movers (which she paid for ) and her children, who had to take time off to help her.
Don't be selfish, OP. Don't wait till it's too late to be able to make the move on your own. My parents were able to do everything on their own because they were healthy enough at 60 something.
I don’t see anything wrong with hiring movers and asking kids to help out? I’d help my parents move, anyway. They helped me when I was young, it seems totally appropriate to help them out now.
Anonymous wrote:A lot of people can't handle the stairs past a certain age. Both my mom and MIL (in their 80s) have a problem with stairs. My mom moved to a ranch when she was in her 60s. They knew stairs was going to be an issue eventually so why wait.
My MIL, oth, was adamant that she could handle the stairs and refused to move when she was in her 60s. FFW to 80, and she was having issues, but she still did nothing to move. We've all been telling her to move for the past 10 years. She finally made the move, but it was more painful than it had to be. She couldn't do anything herself so she had to rely on movers (which she paid for ) and her children, who had to take time off to help her.
Don't be selfish, OP. Don't wait till it's too late to be able to make the move on your own. My parents were able to do everything on their own because they were healthy enough at 60 something.
Anonymous wrote:By staying in our suburban home, where the kids grew up, this is what I wrestle with - compared to our young adult children raising families, I never want to have the bigger house. I don't want it to be US that has the closer-in, better commute location (even if we aren't commuting), access to the better schools, cushier suburban lifestyle. It's just upside down.
Haven't had to deal with this, exactly, yet. I think this a lot. Guessing DH and I would choose to sell and, if it would help our kids w/their housing option, split the proceeds of the house. We'll see what money is needed, for them to live in the DMV, if they choose, when the time comes.
I'll happily treat ourselves to travel and other luxuries but wouldn't feel good having the most expensive house of anyone in the family, not in retirement.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My friend had a baby at age 50. She is now 62 with a 12 year old. Retirement communities typically will not accept kids.
goodness. Surrogate? Adopted?
DH and I had gone out for a walk and heard a baby crying. We said, "We haven't heard that in a while." Our kids are in HS. I said to DH that while I miss how cute our kids were when they were younger, I would never want to go back to those years again. It was hard enough in my 30s. I can't imagine trying to raise a baby/toddler at my age, and I'm 52.
Anonymous wrote:My friend had a baby at age 50. She is now 62 with a 12 year old. Retirement communities typically will not accept kids.
Anonymous wrote:The stairs keep me healthy/strong. And we’ve lived here 25 years, love our neighborhood and neighbors. Why move unless we have to? Plus, for the amount of our mortgage payment, we’d get half the space in today’s market, whether a rental or new purchase.
Anonymous wrote:I've talked to my parents frequently about this, since all their children have moved to the opposite coast from them and we're worried about their plans for aging in place at their two-story home. The reasons they don't want to move are:
1. Emotionally, cannot bear to sell the house where kids were raised.
2. Overwhelmed by amount of stuff in their house.
3. In denial about the difficulty of moving after one of them dies or has a health crisis.
4. In denial about how they will continue to live in the suburbs once they can't drive.
They are in their mid-70s and have declined a lot in the last 1-2 years. I have grandparents in their early 90s still living in their own home, and my parents will often remark on how bad that choice is for my grandparents (very isolated, they shouldn't drive but do, etc.) but think they are / will be different somehow. Meanwhile my in-laws moved into a 55+ community where they have a lovely single-floor accessible house and an array of social activities, can walk to grocery, are near their adult kids, etc.