- Aug 25, 2001
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The point is as a good parent you should start preparing them for standing on their own from day one. Then when they become of age it will not be a subject. They will naturally migrate away on their own.
The point is as a good parent you should start preparing them for standing on their own from day one. Then when they become of age it will not be a subject. They will naturally migrate away on their own.
-Yup "I'm not raising kids, I'm raising adults"
You should be raising kids to become adults. Starting from day # 1.
Wow, that's, uh... an interesting take.There's a lot of grey area here. I have raised 5 kids with one still at home. The oldest two did not need much encouragement to leave the nest. The middle two can fly but they keep fluttering back to the nest. With the youngest, it remains to be seen. Someone remarked that it should be on the parents indefinitely to keep kids until they are self-sufficient, but that that is wrong-headed to say the least. Every person has free will, and there's a lot of nature in with that nurture. No two of my kids are at all alike, despite ensuring as much consistency as possible in their upbringing. All that said, kicking a kid out on the 18th is likely a sign of sociopathy, such persons should be evaluated for involuntary commission to an institution.
Sounds like a recipe for a great childhood.
My grandkids' POS dad has a policy that when his kids tuen 18 or graduate from high school, he kickes their ass and throws them out of the house with only what they can carry. He beat the shit out of our granddaughter and threw her out before she turned 16. (Problem child)
How many of you's are stuck with adult children in their 50's living with you...pretending they are earning a living doing swap meets and garage sales?? I just became aware of this...turns out there is a large sub culture of "adult infants" doing this and still living off their parents..