Anonymous wrote:Just throwing out an anecdote for you OP —
My parents moved out of state my freshman year of college (8 hours from where I grew up). I split college breaks between going to see my parents and going back to visit/stay with HS friends. To this day, my family will fly to the new state to see my parents once every year or 2 (in part because cost of flights and work/school schedules), but also because it’s not “home” and it’s not somewhere I want to use my limited PTO and travel money to visit.
My DH and I stay put for the holidays (his family is drivable within an hour so we spend part of the day with them). I have not paid $$$ holiday airfare to go see my parents in close to a decade. We tend to visit at less expensive times of year.
I respect my parents’ wishes to move out of state to a place where I still don’t really know the roads and just generally don’t have any familiarity/nostalgia for. It’s quasi rural and there isn’t much to do. We have to rent a car and drive an hour from the closest mid-size airport. Honestly, this does affect how often we go see them.
Meanwhile my DH and I are raising our kids in a 2,400 sq ft house with low interest rate mortgage that will be paid off once our youngest (of 3) gets through college. We can age in place for a while here until our kids are all fully launched with their own families. After experiencing my parents move while I was in college, I feel very strongly about maintaining a safe, familiar a landing place for my kids during breaks and early adulthood.
When we downsize we may keep a place in this area and also take into consideration where our kids settle down. We will make sure we are close enough to a major airport to be easy to visit.
You are completely free to downsize and live your life an hour away. But that doesn’t mean you are free from the effects of your children potentially not coming to see you as often and having sad feelings about losing their childhood home during this transition in their lives.
Anonymous wrote:OP, lots of angles to this. First, this gives you the opportunity to emphasize: they are adults now. Adults having relationships with other adults. Adults do not guilt others, to get their way. No one should but adults are held to a higher expectation. They can be sad, and have all kinds of sentimental feelings, sure. There is a limit, though, on expresses them. No one has to tolerate rude (if it gets to that) You also have a similar obligation to not talk on-and-on about how great this change is how excited you are. Just don't talk about it tooo much. You know it's a decision that hurts them, that's ok. Just be sensitive to that.
Anonymous wrote:Have you looked at mortgage rates? No wonder they are pissed. They will never be able to afford a home LOL.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:oldest in last year of college, youngest in military. We have decided to down size, be mortgage free, and move to another area about an hour away from current location. My kids are very upset bc this is house they grew up in but honestly I feel its the best we can do for ourselves. House we currently have is huge, huge yard, huge pool, huge maintenance, medium payment. No one has used the pool now that my youngest is gone. I can't see them moving back home. I just hate the guilt.
We live in the Suburbs in an 80s quiet community. Some original owners still live there and we barely see family coming around to visit. For most, their kids live far or in other states. Some have grandchildren that come visit during the summer but for the most part of the year they are alone. We have teens and a few other new families have younger kids so our elderly neighbors enjoy watching and chatting with us. I do, however, wonder why they still live there. The houses are all 4-5 bedrooms with good size yards and some pools. I can't help to think it must feel very lonely...
We have teens and hope to down size and be mortgage (and college loans) free to travel onces our teens are out of the home. We have our first kid heading to College now and our kids know that's our plan.
Anonymous wrote:oldest in last year of college, youngest in military. We have decided to down size, be mortgage free, and move to another area about an hour away from current location. My kids are very upset bc this is house they grew up in but honestly I feel its the best we can do for ourselves. House we currently have is huge, huge yard, huge pool, huge maintenance, medium payment. No one has used the pool now that my youngest is gone. I can't see them moving back home. I just hate the guilt.
Anonymous wrote:My spouse and I are having arguments about something similar at least once a month. They want to sell the house and move as soon as our DC graduates high school. I repeatedly remind my spouse that we may need to stay in state depending upon where DC goes to college. I feel very strongly that we need to stay at least one year into college so DC has a familiar place to come to to make the transition easier. My spouse feels that we did our "duty" by staying her and that DC can stay with friends if they want to come back here. I can't afford the house on my own, so it's a stressful situation.
Anonymous wrote:Tell that they'll feel happy about the sale when you die and they don't have a giant house to clean out. Ask me how I know.