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My kids can stay and live in my house as long as they want. My youngest wants to stay at home all during her 8 years of college, she is welcome with open arms. My comment about the locks comes from a whole lot of attitude coming from my teen and causing a lot of hardship on the household. I have tried everything all the love, intervening and just about everything you can imagine. Once she turns 18 I won't take the abuse anymore. You don't know what I am going through so don't judge me.
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hrm, its definately the parents that determine how their children will turn out.
i got a job at 16 bought a car, dropped out of school, moved out at 17, joined the army at 19, put myself through college a few years later, and now am 25 with a very bright career as a computer technician.
does that make me better than someone who was given everything? i think not. what i failed to mention is that my parents offered no guidance and did not care what i did, i learned the very hard way by breaking all the rules and getting into alot of trouble, living on the street and doing other unspeakable things to survive.
anyway, it doesn't matter because everyone has a tough life in some way or anouther, and its not up to us to judge how other people raise their children.
if jimmy wants to drop out of school and live with mommy until he is 30 , thats fine, he will have a very sheltered life and i pity him, but i do not envy him.
there will always be people more fortunate than you in life, this is something you either accept or spend all of your time ranting about online, i neither hate rich people nor feel sorry for poor people.
(steps down from soapbox)
well, i'm off work now, time to go home and play with my puppy :)
have a good day!!!
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I have to agree with most everyone here. I'm 22 and I dropped out of high school my senior year but I've had a job since I turned 16. My mother never "gave" me anything for "free". She even kicked me out when I dropped out of school. I had to work for anything that I wanted or needed and I've thanked her for that now. I wouldn't be as responsible as I am now if she would have given me everything I wanted. I now have five kids and I've been married for 3 years in December. I love my mother for what she made me do. Some of these kids now have no Idea how easy they have it.
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Kay, your point is well taken and I see it a lot, having a teenage daughter of my own. As long as she stays in school, keeps her grades up, plays her sports and helps out at home, I have no problem. She is a 15 year old girl who has not disappointed us at this time, and she is striving to get into college at a school with high academic standards. That is the most important thing for her to concentrate on at this time. BUT, I do hold her responsible for some of her outside expenses, even though she doesn't hold a job at this point. I just don't want to see that hand held out, all the time, for this or that, especially eating out and movies, when a meal is being provided at home. That is the kind of thing that she has to make choices about and use her own money to pay. She makes some money by babysitting, and yes, I pay her a measly allowance, every month. But, I buy her clothes, pay for sports expenses, buy her gasoline (as long as she is being responsible in where she is driving), and obviously pay all her other living expenses. I am proud of the choices my daughter has made and I have tried to raise her the way my parents raised me, to be responsible, with my education as the most important thing.
I worked in the summers from the time I was 14 years old. I rode my bicycle to work most days, when I wasn't a legal driver, and later either got a ride from one of my parents, or drove one of their cars, when it suited them. My parents paid for me to go to college, and I worked in the summers to raise my spending money. I did that all the way through college, and although my dad bought my first car, the summer after my Junior year in college, I also had to sign a note to pay him back for it, as soon as I graduated.
My daughter is more spoiled than I was, but she has earned that right, and I think that every child needs to learn responsibility and not just feel entitled to free room and board, without something in return.
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I can't really speak out of experience because I am only 13, but I can speak on behalf of my brothers. I can say that I might be called 'spoiled' because I don't do much around the house, yet get lots of stuff. I'm not totally spoiled; like I don't whine about how I have to get the newest clothes or whatever. I'm happy if I get my clothes at Wal-Mart! :p Sorry to get slightly off topic. But, that is what irks me. When girls have like a billion outfits and they don't pay for any of them. I had to use my own money for school clothes, given I didn't earn that money, but I still had a limit.
Ok, now for my brothers' stories. When my brother turned 18, he didn't get a job right away or have to pay for anything in the house. He was still going to college so he could get a good job. Yes, my parents paid for all his stuff but they said that it was at a good price. He was getting an education for a better job. As soon as he finished getting his...is it bachelors? Well he went to college for four years. Anyway, when he finished that, he went out and got a job. He is now a teacher, but still lives with us. He got himself a new truck and will move out as soon as he gets a couple more paychecks.
My other brother whom is 20, also still lives with us. He doesn't pay for many things, if any but he is also going to college. So I guess my parents' 'policy' is that you don't have to earn your own stuff until you finish college. And if they do finish college but can't find a job, they won't kick them out of the house. That's cruel IMO. They might start stealing or selling drugs to actually get enough money to rent an apartment or a place to live. I don't think my brothers are spoiled, but I think they do have enough responsibilities.
Woah, didn't want this thing to be so long!
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I know the feeling Kfmar. I had one brother who was the same way and even resorted stealing from me and my brother. I went to school and started working when I was 14 so I could afford to pay for my own things. He never worked and quit school. He felt that my mother owed him the money our father sometime gave her for our child support. He would get mad when my mom and I would go shopping and I'd come home with bags of clothes, shoes, movies and anything I wanted, but yet couldn't comprehend that I paid for my stuff out of the money I earned.
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When I was 14, I was given an allowance of $5 a week and with that, I had to buy all my own clothes. I learned how to budget and save up for what I wanted. It was the best lesson my parents could have taught me.
My two nieces were very spoiled growing up. Christmas was always a nightmare for me because a) there was nothing I could get them that they didn't already have and b) anything they wanted I could not afford. Fortunately, they grew up without that "spoiled attitude" and now, at the ages of 24 and 26, they each pay their own way.
...and when I was a kid, I had to walk 10 miles to school each way, all uphill with no shoes and....oops, sorry, that was my Dad speaking... :D :D
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There was a great story (and I do not mean great in a good way....) about
some 17 year old kid in the area where Edwina'a Sect. lives..
These kids were having a bite to eat at a restaurant when they decide to race their cars afterwards.
One kid flips his car, kills himself and seriously effs up the two girl passengers.
The other driver will go to jail for murder.
One kid was driving a BMW and I forgot what the other car was..
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The stupid parents will sue the carmaker, the city of Irvine and everyone else they can put on the suit.
Why?
Because they wanted to give their kids "what I didn't have when I was
growing up...."
Instead they gave their kids eternal youth, they will never get past the age of their death.
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Slick!
You forgot "in hip-deep snow" :D