Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We work up early. As a Mom I can’t sleep til kid home . I know I know. Trying to give freedom but also hoping for advice on compromise use at least during work week. 2nd summer after college.
Could you ask them to text you at midnight or whatever the latest is that you want to stay up until?
I think it's reasonable to say you want them to come home at some point in the overnight and not stay elsewhere. Yes, 18/19 is an adult and yes they were at college but the truth is that most college campuses offer a isolated environment where everyone is there for the same reason and in the same age range. This just isn't the case in the real world and yes, 18/19 years old are still young and just don't have that much real world adult experience even when they think they do.
Anonymous wrote:We work up early. As a Mom I can’t sleep til kid home . I know I know. Trying to give freedom but also hoping for advice on compromise use at least during work week. 2nd summer after college.
Anonymous wrote:This is one of the reasons I could not wait to move out after college. My parents were the same. They would say the same thing.."I can't sleep until I know you are home'.
I get it.. I have kids now, and maybe I might end up the same way, which is why I would ecourage my kids to leave the nest if they don't want to adhere to my rules.
Anonymous wrote:I came home after freshman year and had a midnight curfew. That is the last time I lived in my parents' house.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is your house. You are not running a free boarding house. Explain why it bothers you. I knew as a college student that what I did while away at school in terms of staying out late was not going to be okay with my parents and I respected that it was their house and adjusted behavior accordingly. Not talking about coming home at 9 but midnight on weeknights is reasonable compromise.
But Mom doesn't have a problem, generally, with kid staying out late (and since kid is 20, that's as it should be). And kid doesn't wake Mom up when she gets home. It's that Mom can't mak herself sleep until kid gets home. This is Mom's issue, and it's pretty ridiculous to ask kid to solve it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We work up early. As a Mom I can’t sleep til kid home . I know I know. Trying to give freedom but also hoping for advice on compromise use at least during work week. 2nd summer after college.
Get over it. My mom tried this when I came home for summers. So I stopped coming home and moved out right after college. It is fine to ask for (some general) plans and ETA of when they'll be home. This is what respectful adults do. It is not fine to go much beyond that.
Anonymous wrote:We work up early. As a Mom I can’t sleep til kid home . I know I know. Trying to give freedom but also hoping for advice on compromise use at least during work week. 2nd summer after college.
Anonymous wrote:Generally speaking as I know every case is different--I also wonder if there is a difference if you have a boy vs. a girl.
As a mom of a girl, yeah I just cannot sleep as I worry about her safety. One extra thing of concern with girls is the vulnerability within their own friend group (i.e. guys in their friend group).
I mean--totally generally speaking, and also theoretically speaking, since I don't have an adult son...but my friend's son is 6'2" and was on the football team. He's also a level-headed, non-partier kid. My friend doesn't worry about him getting beat up or raped.
And I think another aspect is the personality of the kid--if you have a risk-taker etc or not. And even small things: I have one DD who sometimes forgets to shut the garage door or might not lock the front door. But I've got a younger one who is really good with that kind of stuff.
Anonymous wrote:It is your house. You are not running a free boarding house. Explain why it bothers you. I knew as a college student that what I did while away at school in terms of staying out late was not going to be okay with my parents and I respected that it was their house and adjusted behavior accordingly. Not talking about coming home at 9 but midnight on weeknights is reasonable compromise.
Anonymous wrote:You need to train yourself to sleep when he’s not home. Devise a system where he turns off a hall light or something you can see from your bed when he gets home. You’ll get used to it, OP.
Your nearly grown son is learning to self-regulate and trust himself to make time management decisions.