Anonymous wrote:I would not move my kid in senior year.
My parents moved in senior year, and it was hard to start a new school with new teachers, new strangers. Hard to make new friends unless the other teens are in your neighborhood.
it's the social impact on your teen that you need to focus on.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am fascinated by OPs situation-- resident of one state but living in another state which generates sufficient tax savings to pay for private school?
Sound fishy.
Anonymous wrote:I am fascinated by OPs situation-- resident of one state but living in another state which generates sufficient tax savings to pay for private school?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If savings on OP not paying state tax on her income are anywhere close to enough to pay private school tuition then it seems like OP is making a decent salary.
She says private school is 12K.
Regardless, I'm astounded at the lack of preparation and consideration shown to the kid in this situation. Decent parents who really have to go where the job sends them are prepared for this eventuality.
He was supposed to have an additional six months on his current orders which have been curtailed. We're shocked. This set was supposed to take her through graduation.
Anonymous wrote:Do people really believe that a high schooler should be the top priority here when talking about dividing a family? The high schooler probably doesn't even understand what the larger implications of this decision are either (she probably envisions continuity and having everything the same and then having parents just go back to how things were after a year, which just doesn't seem all that likely to happen here). The having one parent stay option is close to a nice and supportive one-year divorce situation for a kid.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not enough people are mentioning your own happiness and wellbeing here. You and your daughter will struggle, and struggle more overall in my opinion, if staying isn't a good thing for you personally and your overall family.
I've been told for 20 years that my happiness can't come first, so...it doesn't. That means the sole debate is what's best for her college vs. finances. That's it. The rest of it doesn't enter into the equation, fortunately.
Anonymous wrote:Not enough people are mentioning your own happiness and wellbeing here. You and your daughter will struggle, and struggle more overall in my opinion, if staying isn't a good thing for you personally and your overall family.
Anonymous wrote:Not enough people are mentioning your own happiness and wellbeing here. You and your daughter will struggle, and struggle more overall in my opinion, if staying isn't a good thing for you personally and your overall family.