View Full Version : If my grown-up sons don't leave home soon, I will! Says a Dad
arista
23-01-2014, 10:00 AM
http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2014/01/23/article-2544333-1AE1DB8800000578-532_634x467.jpg
[If my grown-up sons don't leave
home soon, I will! As it's revealed
more men than ever live with
their parents,
a howl of despair from dad-of-three
Roger Lewis was relieved when
his children left home for work or university
But now, all three of his grown
sons are back under his roof
His account comes as it was revealed
one in three adult men still live at home]
http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2014/01/23/article-2544333-0023C13800000258-240_634x476.jpg
http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2014/01/23/article-2544333-1AE03E4200000578-24_634x477.jpg
'While my now very large
boys are only too happy to take
up residence in their childhood
bedrooms, this extended adolescence
is hell for us, their parents'
Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2544333/If-grown-sons-dont-leave-home-soon-I-As-revealed-men-live-parents-howl-despair-dad-three-ROGER-LEWIS.html#ixzz2rDa4NPmv
http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2014/01/23/article-2544333-1AE0426600000578-795_634x464.jpg
What a Bleedin' Mess
You're a parent for life.
Deal with it.
Me. I Am Salman
23-01-2014, 10:07 AM
My brother is 26 and the other is turning 25 this year, still live at home. I still fight with the second oldest one over things like the remote lmfao
Niamh.
23-01-2014, 10:26 AM
You're a parent for life.
Deal with it.
Spoken like someone who's not a parent yet :laugh: Yes, you'll always be a parent but why should that mean that you have to carry your adult children for the rest of your life? There's not a hope in hell my kids will be laying about at home when they're adults. People need to be taught to be independent and look after themselves, how will they ever cope if they have their own kids but they can't even look after themselves? Not to mention i for one am looking forward to being able to having some time back for myself when my kids are adults.
Spoken like someone who's not a parent yet :laugh: Yes, you'll always be a parent but why should that mean that you have to carry your adult children for the rest of your life? There's not a hope in hell my kids will be laying about at home when they're adults. People need to be taught to be independent and look after themselves, how will they ever cope if they have their own kids but they can't even look after themselves? Not to mention i for one am looking forward to being able to having some time back for myself when my kids are adults.
Excuse me, I have 6 daughters :whistle:
:joker:
OT: Your sig :worship:
Me. I Am Salman
23-01-2014, 10:36 AM
I love my family
https://24.media.tumblr.com/2fa942a1e7d9a49ab366c4303b84dd7c/tumblr_mzteu8EkYw1rw9qieo1_500.jpg
Niamh.
23-01-2014, 10:37 AM
Excuse me, I have 6 daughters :whistle:
:joker:
OT: Your sig :worship:
mmhhmmm I bet you do :laugh:
She's gone now though, I need a new favourite -sob-
Kizzy
23-01-2014, 10:38 AM
You're a parent for life.
Deal with it.
Innit tho?.... I wouldn't mind ( mine are 17 & 20) but wish i'd beaten it into mine to be tidier.
Can understand with the 27 year old but 21 and 24 aren't that old to still be living at home, especially when they'll only have just come back from university recently and need time to get themselves a decent job and save up enough to move out
Niamh.
23-01-2014, 10:54 AM
Can understand with the 27 year old but 21 and 24 aren't that old to still be living at home, especially when they'll only have just come back from university recently and need time to get themselves a decent job and save up enough to move out
Yeah, that's true enough actually, but 27? not a hope
arista
23-01-2014, 10:55 AM
Can understand with the 27 year old but 21 and 24 aren't that old to still be living at home, especially when they'll only have just come back from university recently and need time to get themselves a decent job and save up enough to move out
Yes Very True
Benjamin
23-01-2014, 10:56 AM
Who the **** still lives with their parents past 21? Seriously?
Scarlett.
23-01-2014, 10:58 AM
Who the **** still lives with their parents past 21? Seriously?
I do :bawling: (23) but thats because its waaay to expensive to move out, I do pay rent to live here though.
Benjamin
23-01-2014, 10:59 AM
I do :bawling: (23) but thats because its waaay to expensive to move out, I do pay rent to live here though.
No matter when you move out it is going to be expensive though. :laugh:
I guess it is also because I haven' lived at home since I was 16.
Scarlett.
23-01-2014, 11:01 AM
True, I do have savings though, so one day I will eventually have enough, lol.
LemonJam
23-01-2014, 11:04 AM
Who the **** still lives with their parents past 21? Seriously?
I don't, but it's a bit ****ty to look down on people who do tbh.
smudgie
23-01-2014, 11:09 AM
I found a little house for son, and showed him the door.:hugesmile:
Beggar comes home for his Sunday dinner and it is great.
He picks his shopping up as well as I do all his food shopping for him.
Benjamin
23-01-2014, 11:13 AM
I don't, but it's a bit ****ty to look down on people who do tbh.
I just can't believe people do past that age, you're an adult. I could think of nothing worse than living back at home. :laugh:
Me. I Am Salman
23-01-2014, 11:16 AM
Who the **** still lives with their parents past 21? Seriously?
With my family it's more of a cultural thing, there's no stigma about living with your parents because traditionally people would only move out once they get married/it's viewed negatively to leave your parents once they become elderly when they've raised you/there's loads of emphasis on the importance of family and this is all why in the country my parents are from, they have big houses with three generations living together. It's not like you live off them and rely on their labour, you have to provide for them of course, and once they get really old you're responsible for them. My brother has a well paying job with the council and the other one graduated a few years ago and is looking for employment, they aren't lazy and on benefits or anything :laugh:
Ellen
23-01-2014, 11:27 AM
Each to their own. Nothing wrong with your grown up kids living with you until they get married/move in with someone or can afford somewhere of their own but i do think parents should live their own lives & not pander to adult kids. Have rules in that they will pay rent, cook,clean,wash, iron & shop, if not they are out.
Niamh.
23-01-2014, 11:29 AM
Each to their own. Nothing wrong with your grown up kids living with you until they get married/move in with someone or can afford somewhere of their own but i do think parents should live their own lives & not pander to adult kids. Have rules in that they will pay rent, cook,clean,wash, iron & shop, if not they are out.
Absolutely.
Scarlett.
23-01-2014, 11:35 AM
Each to their own. Nothing wrong with your grown up kids living with you until they get married/move in with someone or can afford somewhere of their own but i do think parents should live their own lives & not pander to adult kids. Have rules in that they will pay rent, cook,clean,wash, iron & shop, if not they are out.
I agree totally, I think people who stay at their parents homes for free and just lay about are useless, but at the same time, its up to the parent to let them know that they should be making themselves useful.
..it's really hard for young people to be able to afford to buy their own house, it's just so expensive ..both my sons still live with us, although we don't see them that much because they also spend a lot of time at their girlfriend's houses..I'm happy with them living here and know that they've both saved so that they can afford to buy their own house, which my eldest son and his girlfriend will be doing this year...
Cherie
23-01-2014, 04:28 PM
No matter when you move out it is going to be expensive though. :laugh:
I guess it is also because I haven' lived at home since I was 16.
Did you leave school at 16? My eldest is 16 I would lock him in the attic if he tried to leave, :joker:he can't anyway as he is still at school!
Marsh.
23-01-2014, 04:32 PM
Of course it's always going to be expensive to move out but until you have money to be able to afford it there's nowhere to go but the streets.
If someone's staying at home purely to hang onto their parents for longer, free room, no bills, so they can save all their money for piss ups etc then they need a kick up the backside but if you're paying rent, contributing to bills and housework I don't see the problem especially if you've just graduated and need a little time to get settled in a job.
As the article says if living with parents is all part of "an extended adolescence" then there may be a problem if you're hitting 30 but purely just living with your parents isn't proof of that and there could be all kinds of reasons.
Redway
23-01-2014, 04:37 PM
Who the **** still lives with their parents past 21? Seriously?
Wasn't there something about the increasing amount of young people at home on the news the other day?
Cherie
23-01-2014, 06:41 PM
Wasn't there something about the increasing amount of young people at home on the news the other day?
Economics! No work and unaffordable housing, and when they withdraw Housing Benefits for under 25s which has been proposed it will get even worse.
I'll be moving back in with my parents later this year and I'm 22; I'll need time to get a full time job, start earning proper wages and save up.
Roy Mars III
24-01-2014, 12:35 AM
kick the bum out
anyone who lives with their parents past 25 :nono:
Redway
24-01-2014, 12:45 AM
kick the bum out
anyone who lives with their parents past 25 :nono:
It's not as clear-cut as that, though. There may be many reasons why that happens (not least our current economic climate). Not everyone of a certain age is living with their parents because they can't be arsed paying bills.
My childhood best friend and his older brother both still live at home and I think are examples of kids who need to get a grip and take some responsibility. The older brother left school and has just worked a variety of jobs and been fired from them all because he's got some sleep problems (he can't wake up unless somebody else physically shakes him, he takes his work holidays when his parents go abroad because he knows he'll sleep in...) and my friend dropped out of uni and just works in a shop and goes out all the time, spends lots of money on his girlfriend that he can't really afford to (he bought her a handbag that cost a three figure sum and they weren't even going out yet, she broke it off with him but they eventually started going out...) and neither of them can drive... they just live at home and don't seem to think about the future and my mum's forever talking about how ridiculous she thinks it is that they don't show any signs of ever wanting to leave; whereas I've gone to uni away from home, have always had part time jobs at uni and often full time work when I'm at home over the summer and have been taught that it's wrong to be idle and not try and support yourself. I'll be moving back in when I'm 22 almost 23 but I'll be looking to be in full time work as soon as possible and just start saving up to move out. It will take a while. I'll probably be 25 before I can move out; but I don't think I'm in the same category as someone who's never left home and has never shown any sign of wanting to.
Kizzy
24-01-2014, 10:52 AM
Economics! No work and unaffordable housing, and when they withdraw Housing Benefits for under 25s which has been proposed it will get even worse.
This.
My childhood best friend and his older brother both still live at home and I think are examples of kids who need to get a grip and take some responsibility. The older brother left school and has just worked a variety of jobs and been fired from them all because he's got some sleep problems (he can't wake up unless somebody else physically shakes him, he takes his work holidays when his parents go abroad because he knows he'll sleep in...) and my friend dropped out of uni and just works in a shop and goes out all the time, spends lots of money on his girlfriend that he can't really afford to (he bought her a handbag that cost a three figure sum and they weren't even going out yet, she broke it off with him but they eventually started going out...) and neither of them can drive... they just live at home and don't seem to think about the future and my mum's forever talking about how ridiculous she thinks it is that they don't show any signs of ever wanting to leave; whereas I've gone to uni away from home, have always had part time jobs at uni and often full time work when I'm at home over the summer and have been taught that it's wrong to be idle and not try and support yourself. I'll be moving back in when I'm 22 almost 23 but I'll be looking to be in full time work as soon as possible and just start saving up to move out. It will take a while. I'll probably be 25 before I can move out; but I don't think I'm in the same category as someone who's never left home and has never shown any sign of wanting to.
..I think that's the thing though, everyone is different/has different plans and hopes for their future etc...and there are lots of reasons why 'children' in general sometimes live with their parents a bit longer these days...they often do want their independence and are more than ready to move out and the parents want that for them as well because they know that's what their children want and need...but for my boys, they do earn quite good money and they do save etc and probably could have moved out and rented something quite a while ago but they both have always wanted to be able to buy their own house, rather than rent and saving a deposit that is required to do that is not the easiest thing and takes time...I'm full of respect at how focused they've both been and really excited that for my oldest son, he's about to experience the feeling of the results of all the sacrifices of other things he has made....
AnnieK
25-01-2014, 07:04 AM
I wish I still lived with my parents :sad:
I wish I still lived with my parents :sad:
..aww, really..?...do you not like being independent..a 'grown up'..?...
lostalex
25-01-2014, 09:59 AM
I totally understand how he feels. I have this exact situation happening in The Sims right now. trying desperately to find them wives so they can G T F O.
AnnieK
25-01-2014, 10:04 AM
..aww, really..?...do you not like being independent..a 'grown up'..?...
No it's for purely nostalgic reasons...that living at home and not worrying about the mortgage, bills, what to make for dinner was blissful :laugh: I'm just being lazy and selfish but I loved being at home. My parents would, I am sure disagree :facepalm:
Mystic Mock
25-01-2014, 06:49 PM
My brother is 26 and the other is turning 25 this year, still live at home. I still fight with the second oldest one over things like the remote lmfao
And I always thought trivial stuff like that was the fun of being in a family.
My cheesy post of the day.
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