I get that you might not like her moving in. But children always come first. She comes before you. Always will. And I would personally divorce my second husband before he would try to tell me what to do with my children.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP - she has been staying with her mom. Her mom has been pressuring her to get a job, and I think that's wearing on her. I think she just wants to escape the pressure at her mom's. I do think she should get a job, but my husband wants to give her a little leeway to figure things out (he hopes she will re-enroll in January).
This is aHUGE red flag. If you and your DH are not on the same page about the conditions of her living with you, it will destroy your marriage. You’re going to be the odd one out when your DH agrees with SD that she doesn’t need a job and can stay forever. It will only get harder after she obese in. Figure out exact expectations BEFORE she moves in with you. It’s a good idea to write this down and make it something her mom, dad AND you agree to.
I also think it’s a bad idea to undermine her mom by letting her move in with you without a job plan. Both parents need to be on the same page.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She's not working. 22 years old. Stalled in life right now (never finished college). My husband says we will decide together. I do not want her moving back in with us. He's setting me up to be the bad guy (he knows I do not want her moving back in). What would you do?
Whose house is it?
Generally, I would not want to get between parent and child. If her dad wants his daughter to live with him, it's his call.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For what it is worth we live in a very small house. She never lived with us for more than a weekend at a time as her mom had primary custody when they were kids. We get along fine, i just work too hard and have worked too hard for too long to get to this nice stage in our lives where we can relax and be ourselves to have the dynamic in our home upended.
Well...you did marry a man with a kid, so you never should have counted on that guarantee. Especially before they were all established in adulthood. Your concerns are valid, sure. But your DH has a responsibility to parent his child, and even though she's a young adult it will serve her much better if she has support right now. You certainly don't need to be a doormat, but I do think being generous while helping her launch will go a long way toward family happiness down the road.
This is not a child. This is a grown up who is not employed in a great economy. And not in school. Mom is urging her to get a job and instead of doing so she is trying to loaf off dad instead
She's only 22, and she's still her DH's child. That never changes. As much as OP would love to be the "tough love" adult here, that's just not her role. The best she can do is go to a family therapist with her DH to figure out some boundaries. But if OP's position is that she will never have to do anything to support her stepchild now that she is over 18 - not good.
OP here. I didn't say i wouldn't support a kid over 18. I was just raised in a family where we had to move out at 18. I have three jobs (one full-time and two part-time) and it is nice to come home and be able to relax with my husband. We've had a certain dynamic in the house for about 4 years now that has been calm and relaxed and that's partially why i am able to keep up my work schedule.
Anonymous wrote:She's not working. 22 years old. Stalled in life right now (never finished college). My husband says we will decide together. I do not want her moving back in with us. He's setting me up to be the bad guy (he knows I do not want her moving back in). What would you do?
Anonymous wrote:OP - she has been staying with her mom. Her mom has been pressuring her to get a job, and I think that's wearing on her. I think she just wants to escape the pressure at her mom's. I do think she should get a job, but my husband wants to give her a little leeway to figure things out (he hopes she will re-enroll in January).
Well...you did marry a man with a kid, so you never should have counted on that guarantee. Especially before they were all established in adulthood. Your concerns are valid, sure. But your DH has a responsibility to parent his child, and even though she's a young adult it will serve her much better if she has support right now. You certainly don't need to be a doormat, but I do think being generous while helping her launch will go a long way toward family happiness down the road.
Also want to add that if you say no, it will damage their relationship, which in turn will damage your relationship because he will blame you (rightfully so).
As much as OP would love to be the "tough love" adult here, that's just not her role.
Be nice, it’s his daughter! Kindness always wins. You have her Dad, nice house, nice life, think about sharing and just let her come. Maybe she needs you!
I think you should support him but with certain conditions.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What would you tell your biological 22 year old daughter?
Frankly, 22 isn't ridiculously old to want to move home. I would make any child work, go to school (or trade school), etc. But I would always provide a home for my children. That's what parents do!
Well...my parents had a rule that we all moved out when we were 18 so I'm not sure my opinion would be different. I guess I grew up more independent and have that as my mindset. But you make a good point that parents need to provide a home for their kid. Her problem is she does not want to work. Her mom told us she spends all day at home (no local friends - they're all away at school). She has applied to a few jobs but hasn't had any luck. This would be her first job so she doesn't have any work experience.
Anonymous wrote:You’re cold, OP.