brianmanahan
Lifer
- Sep 2, 2006
- 24,430
- 5,861
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So judging from the comments it seems that my parents are somewhat of an outlier.
I guess you'll have to buy a bigger car and ask them to move in with you.
Maybe I will. In the meantime, OP was asking about retirement age.
The point is that I think OP is likely overstating the burden his parents would be as well as their dependence, especially at just retirement age. Hell the elderly Asian tourist stereotype doesn't exist for no reason.
I guess you'll have to buy a bigger car and ask them to move in with you.
Nope. My retired Chinese parents are super d**n independent. Too independent.
Sorry, but what? Since when is that the Asian bargain? I thought the idea of being Asian was that you were put under severe pressure as a child to succeed and then were supposed to fulfill that so you would become a successful lawyer, doctor, engineer, etc. Obviously, you haven't done that...
So, anyway, I wouldn't bother unless you like your parents a lot. Also, I don't think girls are going to want to date/marry/anything you once the parents have moved in. Consider that heavily.
My grandparents are in their late 80's and still live and take care of themselves.
Yeah, I expect my parents will be living with me when they get too frail to care for themselves. I welcome it, although I'm sure it will not be the easiest thing in the world. They deserve to have someone who loves them take care of them given how great they've been to me.
I'm Chinese and their only child. My parents are currently 63 and they are finally starting to realize that their bodies are not going to hold up and they only have a limited time to travel and see things. Plus they would want to live with me and have their child take care of them, like most all Asians do.
So, serious question. What do you plan to do, or have already been doing, for your parents after they retire?
My parents are not the type to do things on their own or explore on their own. They expect me to accompany them wherever they go. They said they want to retire and just spend time traveling with me, totally different from the usual western retiree who buys an RV for them and their spouse and go at it alone. And when they're not traveling, they want me to take care of them. They definitely don't want nursing homes but at the same time they have no insistence on taking care of themselves.
Anyone else here dealing with the same situation?
I'm about as far as you can be to settling down and taking care of some aging parents. But this is kind of the Asian bargain - when you are born into an Asian family they give you everything growing up but then they make the decision for you through guilt that you will be taking care of them when they're old.
I'm always amazed at how many people subscribe to the "Kids must take care of the elderly parents" mentality. I certainly do not.
I'm Chinese and their only child. My parents are currently 63 and they are finally starting to realize that their bodies are not going to hold up and they only have a limited time to travel and see things. Plus they would want to live with me and have their child take care of them, like most all Asians do.
So, serious question. What do you plan to do, or have already been doing, for your parents after they retire?
My parents are not the type to do things on their own or explore on their own. They expect me to accompany them wherever they go. They said they want to retire and just spend time traveling with me, totally different from the usual western retiree who buys an RV for them and their spouse and go at it alone. And when they're not traveling, they want me to take care of them. They definitely don't want nursing homes but at the same time they have no insistence on taking care of themselves.
Anyone else here dealing with the same situation?
I'm about as far as you can be to settling down and taking care of some aging parents. But this is kind of the Asian bargain - when you are born into an Asian family they give you everything growing up but then they make the decision for you through guilt that you will be taking care of them when they're old.
