Anonymous wrote:Since you could telework, why not just move to her college town? Is it a nice town?
It's Williamsburg. HA! We wouldn't be the first to consider retirement there! We need more vibrancy I'm afraid and our DC would have none of it. Maybe that's a good sign.
Anonymous wrote:
I don't cater to my kids' every whim but I wouldn't consider moving until my kids are out of college. We live in a county where we've had to change schools far too many times. I think the transition to college is stressful enough that I wouldn't throw in another life change so quickly.
Anonymous wrote:We are divorcing and we will keep the family home until the youngest is a rising junior in college.
We expect our kids to have internships that summer.
I spent a lifetime building the community around us. I’m not going to just move away from that as soon as my kids go to college.
I think your daughter has a right to her feelings and it does not make ger immature to be connected to a community of friends.
I don’t think a lot of people on DCUM will understand that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My parents did this and it was fine. I survived. She’ll make new friends at college and keep in touch with the old ones through social media.
But will she be as inclined to want to visit as she would if she were going "home"?
Is this a serious question? Why would I not want to visit my parents and other siblings? This is just stupid. How long into adulthood are you going to cater to your child's every whim?
I don’t think it’s catering to their every whim. But no matter when as an adult your parents move away from your hometown, the new place they live isn’t going to be your home and depending on where that new place is, it can be expensive and time-consuming to now visit some place where your only connection is that your parents now live there. My ILs moved from the home/area they had lived in for nearly 40 years a couple years ago and cannot grasp this concept, that it is a lot more difficult to visit their new location and a lot less compelling because of where it is and that my H has no connection to the location. Whereas before, he was happy to visit and bring the kids to see the places that were important to him growing up, he could still see his friends who settled there, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My parents did this and it was fine. I survived. She’ll make new friends at college and keep in touch with the old ones through social media.
But will she be as inclined to want to visit as she would if she were going "home"?
Is this a serious question? Why would I not want to visit my parents and other siblings? This is just stupid. How long into adulthood are you going to cater to your child's every whim?