Anonymous wrote:OP here - we live in Bethesda. I am pretty sure I am not the only one who has insecurities and I think part of parenting is recognizing my own insecurities versus what honestly would be better for the kids. More space when they are teenagers, so we have one of the houses all of the kids congregate in? Work more hours? Money set aside for traveling? More college savings? It sounds like some of the previous posters are 100 percent confident in their choices, but I find the trade-offs more complicated. I would think there are parents who have made difficult choices in order to purchase a larger house, and they are happy they did so.
Anonymous wrote:I know it's a pat answer, but when my kids first started complaining about the lack of space and how gigantic some friends homes were , I looked at them with horror and said "With a bigger house I would have to walk farther to hug you!" and ran to tackle/hug them (they're teenage boys, it's a violent hug as they squirm )
It never got mentioned again.
Anonymous wrote:1) You need to take pride in your home, and your kids will absorb that.
2) Your kids need to know how lucky they have it compared to 99% of the rest of the world. They need to feel grateful for what they have.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We're two adults and two teens in two bedrooms with 1 1/4 baths. We're fine.
What is a 1/4 bath?
1/2 of 1/2 bath.
In other words, a 1/2 bath for pygmies.
I was thinking it was just a toilet? But then you would have to dash out to find a sink to wash your hands, so I hope I'm wrong
Maybe (hopefully) just a sink
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We're two adults and two teens in two bedrooms with 1 1/4 baths. We're fine.
What is a 1/4 bath?
1/2 of 1/2 bath.
In other words, a 1/2 bath for pygmies.
I was thinking it was just a toilet? But then you would have to dash out to find a sink to wash your hands, so I hope I'm wrong
Anonymous wrote:OP here - we live in Bethesda. I am pretty sure I am not the only one who has insecurities and I think part of parenting is recognizing my own insecurities versus what honestly would be better for the kids. More space when they are teenagers, so we have one of the houses all of the kids congregate in? Work more hours? Money set aside for traveling? More college savings? It sounds like some of the previous posters are 100 percent confident in their choices, but I find the trade-offs more complicated. I would think there are parents who have made difficult choices in order to purchase a larger house, and they are happy they did so.
Anonymous wrote:OP here - we live in Bethesda. I am pretty sure I am not the only one who has insecurities and I think part of parenting is recognizing my own insecurities versus what honestly would be better for the kids. More space when they are teenagers, so we have one of the houses all of the kids congregate in? Work more hours? Money set aside for traveling? More college savings? It sounds like some of the previous posters are 100 percent confident in their choices, but I find the trade-offs more complicated. I would think there are parents who have made difficult choices in order to purchase a larger house, and they are happy they did so.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here - thank you for everyone's thoughtful responses! While I agree with everyone's posts (the grass is always greener, be grateful, our home is big relative to other homes around the world), I do think it can be a struggle, even for an adult, to maintain that positive attitude if most people we know or encounter have bigger homes. Our home is fine, but it would be nice to have more space to entertain or another full bath. Also, I wonder if it would be worth it to move to a more affordable area so that we can feel more or less average, as opposed to being on the lower end of the income spectrum in our neighborhood and school.
OP, I think this may be your small-house dilemma (and feelings of inadequacy), not your children's.
OP, it's really important to project self confidence in these matters. Kids pick up on our insecurities and we don't want our insecurities to become theirs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here - thank you for everyone's thoughtful responses! While I agree with everyone's posts (the grass is always greener, be grateful, our home is big relative to other homes around the world), I do think it can be a struggle, even for an adult, to maintain that positive attitude if most people we know or encounter have bigger homes. Our home is fine, but it would be nice to have more space to entertain or another full bath. Also, I wonder if it would be worth it to move to a more affordable area so that we can feel more or less average, as opposed to being on the lower end of the income spectrum in our neighborhood and school.
OP, I think this may be your small-house dilemma (and feelings of inadequacy), not your children's.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We haven't had the "Johnny has a bigger house" problem, but we have had Johnny make rude comments when he is a guest in our home about how much bigger his bedroom is than our son's. Johnny did not get invited back.
Be matter-of-fact about it, OP. If you show that YOU feel your house is inadequate, the kids will pick up on that. If you speak with your spouse about how much you lack compared to your neighbors, the kids will overhear and internalize. Convince yourself, first and foremost, that you are doing the right thing living within your means.
And I agree with many PPs that experiences are more valuable than things, but for a lot of us it's not, "big house vs. fancy vacation." It's "big house vs. ability to put food on the table." I know when you're inside the bubble it can feel like everyone has so much money they are just choosing between various non-essential luxuries, but that's not always the case.
Yes. What PP said. You don't have a small house problem. You have a envying your neighbor problem, and it is bleeding over into the kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We're two adults and two teens in two bedrooms with 1 1/4 baths. We're fine.
What is a 1/4 bath?
1/2 of 1/2 bath.
In other words, a 1/2 bath for pygmies.
Anonymous wrote:We haven't had the "Johnny has a bigger house" problem, but we have had Johnny make rude comments when he is a guest in our home about how much bigger his bedroom is than our son's. Johnny did not get invited back.
Be matter-of-fact about it, OP. If you show that YOU feel your house is inadequate, the kids will pick up on that. If you speak with your spouse about how much you lack compared to your neighbors, the kids will overhear and internalize. Convince yourself, first and foremost, that you are doing the right thing living within your means.
And I agree with many PPs that experiences are more valuable than things, but for a lot of us it's not, "big house vs. fancy vacation." It's "big house vs. ability to put food on the table." I know when you're inside the bubble it can feel like everyone has so much money they are just choosing between various non-essential luxuries, but that's not always the case.