Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is weird to me.
Just from a privacy standpoint, it’s weird to be washing a teenager’s underwear. It’s not that I’m worried a college student wouldn’t be able to figure out how to use a washer in the dorms — of course they would! It’s more the principle that you’re having someone else wash your dirty underwear. It’s weird. It’s the equivalent of continuing to wipe your teens buts because “of course” they’ll be able to figure it out when they leave home! Some things are about privacy and bodily autonomy.
Why would underwear need privacy? I think this is an odd viewpoint.
So you’d let anyone see and touch your underwear? Ooooookay.
Anonymous wrote:If not, how old were they when you told them to fend for themselves?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kids do a lot of things but laundry isn't one of them. We have too many people living in our house for one person to be hogging one of the washing machines or dryers.
Usually by late elementary school they can and will do a load if they need something that they discovered wasn't in the laundry basket. Other than that they don't start doing laundry for real until the summer before they leave for college. That's the system I've set up and I'm sticking with it. They are doing so many other things outstandingly well that I am not worrying about laundry.
If doing laundry is your line in the sand for whether a kid is a lay-about or productive then I think it is a dumb metric.
I think you miss the point. You shouldn't do things for your kids that they can do for themselves. It should be a source of pride for them that they can take care of their own needs. When you deny them that you do them no favor.
My kids know how to do their own laundry and never had chores beyond taking out the trash and recycling. They help out when asked. They are good people and good students. Sometimes chores are just something to fight about. With the pandemic my focus is on keeping my remaining child at home focused and mentally well. All she has to do is her school work. She doesn't wash a pan but she is doing all of her college apps on her own. That's enough. Keeping house is not rocket science. She'll do it when she needs to and she's got a lifetime of dishes and laundry and all that garbage ahead of her. More than happy to do it for her for now.
Anonymous wrote:10 and 12 year old do their own laundry and have for two years. They do it all, from start to putting it away. My 10 year old is terrible at folding, but he’ll get there with practice. I always rolled my eyes at the kids in college who had no clue what to do in the laundry room. I did a lot of unpaid instructional college courses in laundry in the first semester 😂

Anonymous wrote:I do everyone's. It just makes more sense to do full loads sorted by of color and material then multiple small loads of mish mash clothes. It isn't efficient and isn't good for the longevity of the clothes.