Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP is a control freak. This is why the DD is putting up boundaries and distance between them. Sure, op is free to not pay and I think the kid will be fine and survive, just not get that degree on schedule. There is no amount of money worth selling your soul. If OP needs a performance out of her DD, she is better off throwing in a lot of love along with that money. Obviously, using money as a weapon isn’t working out.
Agree with this completely. Cutting off your kid because she was "rude and mean" is beyond childish but it sounds like OP is okay with never having a relationship with her kid again so I'm guessing these issues are deeply rooted. My DD wasn't always the most pleasant teen but I am so grateful I didn't react like the OP.
Lying and cocksure financially dependent college student cuts off communication with parents, left for college without so much as a bye (in the new leased car the parents pay for), and expects a large pot of gold to fall from the sky (because it always did the other semesters). And the parents are in the wrong? Interesting.
Anonymous wrote:I'm always amazed by adults who think throwing a hissy fit over something so life-changing is ever a good idea. Your DD is presumably 18. She may be a brat, but don't kid yourself into thinking you played no part in that. That somehow your parenting had no role in that.
Presumably, you have all sacrificed to get where you are today. Your child is enrolled in her college of choice that will improve her employment prospects. Communication is a two-way street. If you want to ruin her future over a hissy fit, then by all means do. But know full well what you're doing.
Also, college these days is an extension of high school and hardly this luxury that some of you seem to think it is. I am a firm believer in higher education and would never do this.
Anonymous wrote:So you know he is alive because you can see his college bill? How do you know your child is alive? How do you know he enrolled for classes?
Anonymous wrote:At the start of DD’s 2nd semester freshman year, her dad announced, he would not pay his share. It wasn’t anything she did. I’d like to believe it also had nothing to do with the fact that I started dating my now DH a few months earlier, but whatever. It was too late to adjust FA or start the monthly payment plan.
The accounts payable office university told us that she could not have a balance and continue attending, but the ombudsman’s office simply froze her account and told us to pay as much as we could whenever we could and she couldn’t reregister or get records until the balance was paid.
She continued living in the door and eating meals.
It was all paid off by mid-April. She did miss the housing deadline and the first wave of registration, but they didn’t kick her out.
Anonymous wrote:I can understand the poster’s feelings. It is galling when a child (who thinks they are adults—in the fun ways, not the responsibility ways) is ungrateful and disrespectful.
I would say though that she deserves a clear warning and time to turn her treatment of the family around. And if you have never followed through on setting clear boundaries before, you need to find a way to tell her that this time will be different.
Good luck
Anonymous wrote:What will happen? Relationship damaged, maybe forever.