Anonymous wrote:My parents paid for everything. When I graduated, I was able to immediately secure a great job, take over the loan payments, and they haven’t paid a dime since. Paying for everything doesn’t automatically result in a kid that is fiscally irresponsible.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nothing.
We have plenty of money to pay for undergrad, but doing so does nothing but make them dependenton others. After 18 it is on them, me and DH were both coddled with college paid for school and we dealt with the mental health issues doing so leads to. Lack of financial awareness, lack of hard wor, lack of true ambition, choice of non-STEM major (DH). We want a better life for our kids.
DS got good scholarships and decided to fund the rest through loans and hard work. DD1 chose not to go to school and instead joined te workforce. DD2 is 16 and currently deciding her path.
Uhh I don’t think he “decided” to do that. I think he had no other option because you refused to pay!
I'd bet this PP is either first generation immigrant or POC. They think they will harden their kids by making them pay when they could afford it. The result is an
Anonymous wrote:Nothing.
We have plenty of money to pay for undergrad, but doing so does nothing but make them dependenton others. After 18 it is on them, me and DH were both coddled with college paid for school and we dealt with the mental health issues doing so leads to. Lack of financial awareness, lack of hard wor, lack of true ambition, choice of non-STEM major (DH). We want a better life for our kids.
DS got good scholarships and decided to fund the rest through loans and hard work. DD1 chose not to go to school and instead joined te workforce. DD2 is 16 and currently deciding her path.
Anonymous wrote:Nothing, my parents gave me ZERO for undergrad and gradschool.
After they are finished and have a job I will pay off some of their loans/bills but not while in school. They need to know how serious what they are doing is and a huge price tag will be helpful
Anonymous wrote:A lot of people on here are rationalizing how awesome they are despite the fact that their parents paid for everything, and they keep putting down people who funded their own education as “moral failures.”
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nothing.
We have plenty of money to pay for undergrad, but doing so does nothing but make them dependenton others. After 18 it is on them, me and DH were both coddled with college paid for school and we dealt with the mental health issues doing so leads to. Lack of financial awareness, lack of hard wor, lack of true ambition, choice of non-STEM major (DH). We want a better life for our kids.
DS got good scholarships and decided to fund the rest through loans and hard work. DD1 chose not to go to school and instead joined te workforce. DD2 is 16 and currently deciding her path.
I'd bet this PP is either first generation immigrant or POC. They think they will harden their kids by making them pay when they could afford it. The result is an 18 year old deciding to skip college, and a 16 year old likely going to do the same thing. And a son who will have a degree from a mediocre college with heavy loans. They will all struggle in a "middle class" that looks far worse than even today's crappy middle class standards. But you sure showed them, right?
PP here, and thank you for the (completely wrong) assumptions.
We want our kids to grow up to be smart, dedicated, and hard working. All too often people make money and they ignore what got them there and start using it like a plaything, giving their kids everything they want/need for free. If you want to do that, go ahead. That said, we (me and DH) lived that life for ourselves, getting a scholarship from the bank of mom and dad, making choices not based on proven financial basis but on emotion.
Also, BTW, both my adult children are happy with their choices. DS is studying engineering and very happy with his employment prospects and DD1 may have held off on college, but is working in a field directly related to one of her favorite hobbies with people she cares deeply enough, and that pays her enough to live in the rural area she has settled in. Please dont think Im evil because I want to raise well adjusted, successful children, from where I am at it certainly looks like both of mine are just fine
This logic is bizarre. It sounds like you are punishing them for your mistakes. I support you wanting your kids to understand the value of money. That is your job to teach, so they can learn how finances and bugeting work. This can be done simultaneously while having your education funded. Kids to your son for his accomplishments.
I was bankrolled by my parents, my husband was given a penny by his parents. We are both successful, high earning professionals. I will give my DD the gift of education. That will long outlive anything I could buy her and it can't be taken away.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All costs. Tuition, room and board, clothes, food, restaurants, taxis, uber, tech, car, insurance, amazon, medical, socialization, plane tickets, hotels, tracel, vacations, play tickets, presents...
My kids have been very frugal considering that they have access to money and resources. They have made friends with good kids. We are sort-of but not quite UMC.
Lol...if you can afford all that for your kids, you aren't even close to UMC. You are extremely wealthy.
No. We have lived frugally and saved for everything. My kids get to enjoy some of the perks but they are very cost conscious and do not abuse what we have given them. We are donut hole family and they have got merit scholarships etc. They are sensible and pragmatic. They have never asked for any allowance and they do not shop or socialize in excess. I love how responsible with money they are. They have seen how we have lived and they have followed our example. Our money is hard earned and the little bit of wealth we have has come from frugalness and investing in education.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All costs. Tuition, room and board, clothes, food, restaurants, taxis, uber, tech, car, insurance, amazon, medical, socialization, plane tickets, hotels, tracel, vacations, play tickets, presents...
My kids have been very frugal considering that they have access to money and resources. They have made friends with good kids. We are sort-of but not quite UMC.
Lol...if you can afford all that for your kids, you aren't even close to UMC. You are extremely wealthy.
Anonymous wrote:DH and I are at odds over this. My parents didn't pay for anything. I worked 30-40 hours per week while I was away at school to pay my rent, books, groceries, car, etc. I took out loans for tuition. DHs parents paid for everything. He never even paid a bill until we moved in together.