Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is no magic formula other than being caring and involved parents.
I have many successful friends who did not have that.
And many failure to launch young adults do have caring and involved parents. It’s just that their version of care and involvement frequently looks like (especially in this area) pushing your kid to Harvard and then McKinsey, which may lead to burn out, resentment, and identity diffusion.
What? The people I know at went to Harvard and then McKinsey are married with kids and living in multi million dollar homes. Not living in their parents’ basement as adults.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is no magic formula other than being caring and involved parents.
I have many successful friends who did not have that.
And many failure to launch young adults do have caring and involved parents. It’s just that their version of care and involvement frequently looks like (especially in this area) pushing your kid to Harvard and then McKinsey, which may lead to burn out, resentment, and identity diffusion.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is no magic formula other than being caring and involved parents.
I have many successful friends who did not have that.
Anonymous wrote:There is no magic formula other than being caring and involved parents.
Anonymous wrote:Set expectations for your kids nand beyond college. - they are expected to graduate in four years, and then have a job or be in graduate school within a few months. Spending time to find yourself as a waitress or barista or hanging out in the basement while you figure out what you want to do after graduating is not an option after I have spent $300,000 to send you to college.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is no magic formula other than being caring and involved parents.
While no "magic formula" I do think expecting your kids to do more and more responsibilities as they grow up helps with being a "fully launched adult" come age 22 (end of college). The amount of kids who hit college and have never done a load of laundry is astounding.
We gave our kids more and more responsibilities over time. By age 16 we would leave for the weekend (only once in a while) with the 16 yo in charge of the 12 yo and themselves for 1-2 days. They had a CC and were trustworthy (and friends were nearby to assist if needed). Basically we trusted them and let them have more responsibilities as long as they didn't do something stupid. SO by time they go to college, they have been in charge of a lot. We wanted them to make their mistakes while still at home, with some guidance (and there were some mistakes, but nothing major).
Whereas I have other parents who won't leave their 17 yo home alone for a night, because they "don't trust them". Which to me is a bit scary
My kids never did laundry until college, managed it well and became academically, socially, professionally and relationally successful. [b]Its a good skill to learn but your success of any kind isn't dependent on it or on doing odd jobs.
Anonymous wrote:If you are defining success by “failure to launch” that is going to vary based on cultural differences. I grew up in the Midwest and I know one person who moved back home after college. Everyone else was out of the house at 18. But out there, that’s part of the culture - when you’re an adult, you leave home. Since moving here I’ve come across tons of people who lived (or still live) at home for some period of time as an adult. It seems to be part of the culture out here. Maybe because living here is more expensive? Not sure what drives the difference, but it’s very apparent.