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Children leaving home/returning /leaving

doelani
Posts: 2,576 Forumite

Son (21) left home, for various reasons has returned and went and bought him new bed etc as his old one had gone. Settling in again although hard getting used to extra adult in house. Then yesterday seen on facebook that daughter (19) and her mate are looking for their own place!!!!!
Maybe I should just get a revolving door???
My daughter works 20 miles away adn is thinking of moving closer, do not have a real issue as I know she will be ok but will miss her so much.
Then again she may come back again. lol
Maybe I should just get a revolving door???
My daughter works 20 miles away adn is thinking of moving closer, do not have a real issue as I know she will be ok but will miss her so much.
Then again she may come back again. lol
TOTAL 44 weeks lose. 6st 9.5lb :T
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Comments
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Ask her what her plans are instead of finding out on facebook.
It does sound like a good plan if she lives 20 miles away, she could flatshare with a friend and come back once a week to get her washing done and Sunday dinner (this is exactly what my nephew does!)
However, nephew differs in that his wise Mummy cleared out his room and decorated it as a guest bedroom so there's plenty of room when family come to stay.
This has stopped the door revolving in any way, without shutting it completely.Member of the first Mortgage Free in 3 challenge, no.19
Balance 19th April '07 = minus £27,640
Balance 1st November '09 = mortgage paid off with £1903 left over. Title deeds are now ours.0 -
However, nephew differs in that his wise Mummy cleared out his room and decorated it as a guest bedroom so there's plenty of room when family come to stay.
This has stopped the door revolving in any way, without shutting it completely.
We have done a similar thing, dd moved to Dublin once she graduated, ds1 has gone to uni and renting a house with others, only ds2 at home permanantly now. Had a bedroom reshuffle, ds2 has biggest bedoom, ds1 has a small one for his brief visits home and the other room is now a study (lol! has the big pc in it!) and we have an inflatable matress for when dd comes home to visit.
As much as I love my kids, I think once they have been independent from you it would be very difficult on both sides to get used to the 'parent/child' relationship again.0 -
Ask her what her plans are instead of finding out on facebook.It does sound like a good plan if she lives 20 miles away, she could flatshare with a friend and come back once a week to get her washing done and Sunday dinner (this is exactly what my nephew does!)However, nephew differs in that his wise Mummy cleared out his room and decorated it as a guest bedroom so there's plenty of room when family come to stay.This has stopped the door revolving in any way, without shutting it completely.Settling in again although hard getting used to extra adult in house.Signature removed for peace of mind0
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i think its lovely that they come back i will be awful when my girls leave home,but i will always have a room there for them so they know they can come home whenever they like:xmastree:Is loving life right now,yes I am a soppy fool who believes in the simple things in life :xmastree:0
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Having read previous threads on a similar subject I decided I was within my rights to get DS 20 to clear his room completely when he arranged to share a flat with a work coleague. The room desperately needs decorating and I wanted it empty so we can repaint and said he's welcome to come back and stay whenever he wants/needs but we may swap rooms around so his younger brother can have a larger room with space to study.
Well it all ended in a tremendous row, room was cleared as I asked but I was shouted at and tears both sides as eldest claims he feels unwanted and pushed out, apparently I couldn't wait for him to leave !! (He's been living here for almost two years rent free whilst working and saving for a deposit to buy, it was his decision to rent instead).
I feel terrible now and not quite sure who is in the wrong. It doesn't seem right to keep the biggest room empty most of the time for him to use when he chooses to visit when his brother is stuck in a tiny box room. However eldest is obviously upset by this all which I don't understand.
Middle son quite happily cleared his room to go off to uni and just left a few essentials in wardrobe and lots of boxes etc put in the loft.
Not an answer to OP but just pointing out that feelings can be hurt unexpectedly.Decluttering, 20 mins / day Jan 2024 2/20 -
i am one of the offending children that moved out and back in again - in fact i did it twice! the first time my fiancee cheated on me, leaving me with no other option but to move back home, and the second time i had moved in with a friend whose parents decided to help her buy her own flat, again i couldnt afford to live on my own.
i was always very grateful to my nan for letting me move out and in like that, but as she said, she didnt need to think twice. as far as she was concerned it was the home i grew up in and therefore it was always my home whenever i needed it. i now have my own family but the door would always be open there for us still if we needed it. i think its sad when people think of their children moving back in as a bad thing.Mummy to
DS (born March 2009)
DD (born January 2012)
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I blame t'internet.;)Nature wants the human race to survive. However, it does not depend on us because we are not its only invention.0
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oystercatcher wrote: »Well it all ended in a tremendous row, room was cleared as I asked but I was shouted at and tears both sides as eldest claims he feels unwanted and pushed out, apparently I couldn't wait for him to leave !! (He's been living here for almost two years rent free whilst working and saving for a deposit to buy, it was his decision to rent instead).
I feel terrible now and not quite sure who is in the wrong. It doesn't seem right to keep the biggest room empty most of the time for him to use when he chooses to visit when his brother is stuck in a tiny box room. However eldest is obviously upset by this all which I don't understand.
Middle son quite happily cleared his room to go off to uni and just left a few essentials in wardrobe and lots of boxes etc put in the loft.
Not an answer to OP but just pointing out that feelings can be hurt unexpectedly.
There may be all sorts of things going on for your eldest. He may be doing a few 'what ifs', and fear having to move back long term into his 'little brother's room' - which you say is a box room - especially as the longer one is away, the more 'stuff' one accumulates! I don't know if you can reassure him that if he needed or wanted to come home, another reorganisation could be worked through.
Would a compromise be to re-decorate, turn it into a guest room, and swap middle with youngest brother long-term?
Is it possible to sit down and talk through all the options with them individually, and then together?i think its sad when people think of their children moving back in as a bad thing.
What I don't want him to think is that if he has a minor falling-out with his flatmate, or runs out of money, or just fancies being looked after, he can just move back in and expect the household to revolve around him and his preferences. If DH takes over his bedroom as a study (which he'd like to do!), DS1 will have to live with that.Signature removed for peace of mind0 -
What I don't want him to think is that if he has a minor falling-out with his flatmate, or runs out of money, or just fancies being looked after, he can just move back in and expect the household to revolve around him and his preferences. If DH takes over his bedroom as a study (which he'd like to do!), DS1 will have to live with that.
you mean like i did
i have to say in my defence, that things were very different when i moved back. i did my own washing and ironing, for example, i didnt contribute to the cooking because my nan had a very old fashioned way of thinking that because i'd been at work all day it was wrong for me to cook for her - silly, i know, but if you can find a way of changing the mind of a stubborn 80 year old you're a better woman than i! she also benefitted to a degree from me living there, because she got the companyh she crave d and she would often text me asking me to pick up the odd thing from the shop on the way home, and she got a lift from me sometimes a well when she otherwise would have got the bus! maybe she is rare in that sh edidnt actually want me to move out?
excuse typing errors, my cat decided to come and lay acoss mty wrists halfway through me writing this :rotfl:Mummy to
DS (born March 2009)
DD (born January 2012)
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