Do Our Kids Truly Grow Up?
Got grown kids? If your answer is yes, then reexamine one key word in the question: “Grown.” Are they truly grown up? If not, whose fault is that? Veronica James from GypsyNester.com believes it could be yours … If you don’t do something about it, you might always have Boomerang Kids.
I’m an advice column junkie. I can’t help it. I kick off my morning with a frothy soy latte, my “Crack”berry and a heavy dose of the “Dear crew.”
When I’m lucky, I can persuade my husband David to play along with a game of “What would Dear Abby do?” If he’s is in a particularly sporting mood, we can delve far beneath the layers of the written word. What if the husband, “Chip,” is really in need of Viagra, and is not, in fact, having an affair as “Horny in Hoboken” thinks? What if the meddling mother-in-law, “Madge,” has a point — maybe “Good Mommy in Leavenworth” is, indeed, a bad mommy. Normally, I can convince myself that it is a game of good clean fun. The anonymity of Chip, Madge, and Horny are fascinating and comforting — obviously, these semi-fictitious characters have problems too.
But today’s column is just plain disturbing. And any baby boomer might have written it. It involves a mother who is a newly retired homeowner with an outstanding mortgage. Unless she is the CEO of a major publicly traded corporation, this lady is on a whopper of a fixed income. Now get this: she has two butthole sons, aged 22 and 24, living in her home and she has asked them to pitch in and pay $30 a week. “Stressed-Out Mom” says they are now “ranting and raving and calling her a bad mother.” She goes on to ask if she is being unreasonable. What?!?
Kick those pot-smoking, Cartoon Network-watching little punks out of your house! How can you even ask if you are being unreasonable? It’s time for you to grow some balls and live the life that you have worked your butt off for. They are friggin’ able-bodied men who are completely taking advantage of your enabling ways. Are you going to raise their kids, too?
Because sooner or later, one of them will actually get a date with a loser girl who doesn’t care that she’s seeing a guy who lives with his mommy. Then you are going to have quite the zoo on your hands.
I’m sick and tired of hearing about Boomerang ‘Kids’ and how hard it is for them to make it on their own in the big, bad world. Granted, our generation tended to be more involved with our children’s education, nurtured their every talent, made sure they were safe from balloon-related latex allergies … but the helicoptering MUST stop at some point. The longer we wait, the bigger and badder the world will seem to our offspring.
“Stressed-Out” should have started her sons along a different path a long time ago. Isn’t part of the job to teach your kids to care for themselves? I didn’t raise my son and daughters to be good kids, I raised them to be real adults. That means once they are of age, they are on their own. They began hearing about this early and often. As they headed off to college, they didn’t expect to hear, “Honey, come back any time things get hard.” “Watch out for the screen door” was a bit closer to the mark. They know I love them. Enough to want them to have lives they are proud of. That’s not going to happen in my basement.



Debbie | Jul 21, 2008 | Reply
Thank you so much for this post! I was beginning to think I was the only one out there that raised their children to be self-sufficient. I have a cousin w/ a 34 year old daughter that went off to college and came back home and still lives at home! My kids learned how to set goals, work and manage their money at a very young age. None are boomerang kids so far. Thanks again for the sanity check!
Dawna Lynn | Aug 8, 2008 | Reply
I have a kicker of a story. When my uncle passed away, we inherited his “non-working” son who then became homeless. This son of his had not worked since he was 19 years old. This son of my uncle “my cousin” was 48 years old, living at home, and not paying a dime. He now lives with my dad. I had to MAKE him go to work, but he only pays 250.00 a month. He has no desire to EVER move out. When my 85 year old dad dies then I am stuck with Roy. Roy was an honor student while in high school. Does ANYBODY have a story like this one? Email me at dawnalynn44@yahoo.com if you have any idea what I can do about this mess.