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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsCharging an 18-year-old in high school rent
I just discovered a friend's sister is doing this with her daughter: $200 a month for room and board, because she's an adult.
The kid is still in high school, good grades, had to drop out of all extracurricular activities to be able to earn the money for room and board by working on the weekends.
The amount of when I heard this cannot be expressed.
This isn't a poor household or anything btw.
Indydem
(2,642 posts)This economy is hurting a lot of people who used to be secure.
It may be very bad for them.
I won't jump to conclusions. That's 5.5 hours a week @ $8.50. Maybe they need it more than you know.
Or maybe they are trying to teach her responsibility.
obamanut2012
(26,080 posts)PERIOD.
This isn't saying pay for your own cell, this is ROOM AND BOARD.
Indydem
(2,642 posts)From her Jr. year of HS on through college and the first few years after.
All that time he was putting it into a savings account for her.
She got quite a down payment on a home when she moved out.
You judgmental attitude is noted.
obamanut2012
(26,080 posts)As well as the person you know, charging a MINOR CHILD rent. That is illegal btw.
Indydem
(2,642 posts)And as for my friend, her parents could have easily shown the savings account to any self-rightous law enforcement.
Why don't you let people raise their kids with the financial and responsibility values that they instill and you can raise your kids however you want?
obamanut2012
(26,080 posts)It is ILLEGAL to charge a minor child rent and/or board.
In most states, you have to continue to pay child support to an adult child if they are still in high school. For a reason.
How is any of this teaching responsibility?
I am not the least surprised you think this is a good idea.
Indydem
(2,642 posts)It is SUCH A BURDEN!
To ask an adult to find gainful employment to teach them lessons about work ethic, following a schedule and showing up to work on time?
obamanut2012
(26,080 posts)Who has been accepted to a "Public Ivy" on an almost complete academic scholarship, so I think the kid knows about being responsible and good time management.
I don't get how this has anything to do with ethics. I think you need to learn what that word means.
Indydem
(2,642 posts)Meaning:
Some find it ethical to pay their own way. Others do not.
Your Sister's Friend's Daughter is having her college paid for on scholarship. Perhaps, since she won't have to labor to receive the education, this is her parent's way of teaching her the importance of hard work.
Again, it is absolutely none - NONE - of your business how they raise their child and whether they charge her "rent."
NONE. ABSOLUTELY NONE.
You are being nosy and passing judgement on someone who is of none of your concern.
karynnj
(59,504 posts)It seems the parents raised a child who is succeeding in many ways. As others said, there may be more to the story than you know. As this seems a recent development, it could be there are some financial problems.
It also might even be to make it easier to get a summer job in college summers. It is harder to get some of the jobs and even intern positions that they might want if they do not have anything as a work reference.
CreekDog
(46,192 posts)i really don't.
i understand that politically you're in different places.
but charging a kid that is still a senior rent? what the heck? that's terrible.
it's not a political question, yet here, it's being answered on the basis of politics and ideology. i find that odd on your part.
anneboleyn
(5,611 posts)Yes, that is a burden on a high school student or a full-time college student during the academic year. In fact, that is an excellent way to torpedo a student's grades. Colleges are so competitive these days that a student needs an extremely high gpa plus extras plus an exceptional sat score. Studying for an hour or so at night after a day of school and then five or so hours of work would spell disaster for many.
Indydem
(2,642 posts)Not a day. A WEEK.
TheBlackAdder
(28,209 posts)That is, unless your kids work under-the-table
5.5 hours x 4.3 (weeks/mo.) x $8.50 = $201.
abelenkpe
(9,933 posts)Then he wasn't really charging her rent as the OP is describing.
Indydem
(2,642 posts)I probably should have included that she did not KNOW that they were putting it in a savings account.
It was a surprise to her when she went to make an offer on her first house.
obamanut2012
(26,080 posts)She had to quit basketball to get a job.
Indydem
(2,642 posts)She couldn't come up with 6 hours on Saturday or Sunday to work?
If she had to quit basketball, it wasn't because her parents asked her to find a part time job.
lost-in-nj
(18,339 posts)they tell you when they need you....
lost
tammywammy
(26,582 posts)I've worked since I was 16. Until I got a Monday-Friday job, I was in retail and they always ask when you're available.
SWTORFanatic
(385 posts)legal document anyway.
If you put something other than 24/7 (example: I can't work Friday) and they call you in to work Friday and you can't make it, they can and (often will) fire you.
I had this happen to one of my students (I teach at a college). She took my class Friday mornings. She worked Friday shift early early in the morning and they fired her for going to take my final exam. They knew all semester that she was enrolled in the class.
liberal_at_heart
(12,081 posts)They had to fire someone and asked her to cover more hours. She would stay up all night doing homework. She finally threatened to quit and I think they shortened her hours, but she should never have been asked in the first place. That is a violation of child work laws.
SWTORFanatic
(385 posts)Can't afford college/rent/etc?
GET ANOTHER JOB!
As if that is always possible to get two jobs... or three jobs...... or two jobs and school...... or three jobs and school.... etc that will work out and not conflict time wise so you end up getting fired from one or more of them.
I worked three jobs when I was in grad school, but that was LUCK that they never conflicted.
Response to Indydem (Reply #16)
devilgrrl This message was self-deleted by its author.
Indydem
(2,642 posts)"Their" being the OP, or my friend?
I would have thought that was a shitty thing to do as a parent. Misrepresenting a situation to my kid. Nice that things turned out well for your friend but as a parent I can't see ever misleading my kid that way. There are better ways to teach kids about finance. But maybe I'm just jaded on this subject because of my experience with my own sister? Makes me see the situation in an entirely different light. The opposite of rose colored glasses if you will...
obamanut2012
(26,080 posts)We also worked every summer, and didn't get to buy anything we wanted, nor did we have cars or anything else fancy (for then). We were expected to have good grades and be active in either school activities or things like Girl Scouts or Candy Stripers. We were expected to help around the house.
We were, however, mainly expected to work very hard at our jobs: being students.
AverageJoe90
(10,745 posts)If you don't mind me asking this, were you guys around the poverty line or something? You could buy a decent used car with even a part-time job if you saved up enough.
wickerwoman
(5,662 posts)I can see asking adult kids who aren't in school and are still living at home to contribute to the household fund but I'd set it at 30% of their take-home rather than some arbitrary number like $200 a week.
I think it's crazy to ask a kid who is still in high school to cut back on study hours and extracurricular activities and volunteer work which looks good on a college application to spend that time flipping burgers for minimum wage.
It's important to teach kids the importance of hard work, but it's equally important to teach them the value of their time. When I was in college I turned down unpaid internships and summer study abroad opportunities to be a cashier at a supermarket, a hardware store and a drug store. Some people might say I was learning the value of hard work, but really if I had taken the unpaid internship I would have made better networking connections, pushed myself to my potential and gotten more experience that was relevant to the kind of work I ended up doing as a career. In the long term, I would have made heaps more money getting a better job off of summer internship work experience than I got off of 3 months doing check-out.
Skidmore
(37,364 posts)to get started in her own apartment after she moved out.
anneboleyn
(5,611 posts)RetroLounge
(37,250 posts)RL
Indydem
(2,642 posts)Though it's going to take a while at $200 a month.
RetroLounge
(37,250 posts)RL
HangOnKids
(4,291 posts)POST of the thread!!!
Chan790
(20,176 posts)morningfog
(18,115 posts)morningfog
(18,115 posts)alphafemale
(18,497 posts)I' d charge something once the kid graduated, though.
If they weren' t going on to college, especially. Or at least contribute in a meaningful way. Twenty something layabouts that expect to sit around all day while mommy still does their laundry drive me crazy.
ProudToBeBlueInRhody
(16,399 posts)I mean, would she kick her out if she refused to pay?
Is the kid getting to stay in a separate guest house or something?
Maybe the kid also gets to stay out as late as she wants being an adult, and she's willing to pay for it.
obamanut2012
(26,080 posts)She will be grounded if she refuses to rent and pay rent. She is in her same room, and has the same curfew and everything. She also has to ask permission to do certain things, because it's "their house."
SWTORFanatic
(385 posts)late I stay out or that I have to take out the trash every day or whatever.
Of course she is in high school and with the clout landlords have these days would have a hell of a time renting. Real unclassy move by the parents IMHO.
She pays rent and is an adult, she gets to do what she wants as long as it doesn't include trashing the place or whatever.
Chan790
(20,176 posts)Once they started charging rent, they lost most rights to dictate what a tenant can do. That's what they've made their daughter...a tenant. Let them try to evict, the law is on the tenant's side and she'd be getting damages and rent-free accomodations.
If you want to play that game, Mom and Dad...you best know the rules.
Comrade_McKenzie
(2,526 posts)A parent is supposed to be there to catch you when you fall. For life.
obamanut2012
(26,080 posts)I asked her opinion on this. She said, as long as the child is working or trying to find a job (ie laid off), she would never charge a child or grandchild to live with her, although they would be expected to help with chores and errands, which is totally fair.
FrodosPet
(5,169 posts)If a young adult is capable of providing for themselves, they should provide for themselves. If they are severely physically or mentally disabled, that is different. But if they CAN provide for themselves, they should.
Even if that means a tiny little apartment in the 'hood as opposed to a big house in the 'burbs. Nobody walks straight and tall alone, but they should provide for themselves as much as they can, to allow the surplus of others go to the truly needy as opposed to the "I want to find myself" people who want to be carried by others.
OldDem2012
(3,526 posts)....as long as I'm alive and can provide a place for my kids to live, they have a place to come home to.
jberryhill
(62,444 posts)And what are the parents doing for that rent?
It sounds from other information in the thread that they are likely violating the landlord tenant code, have probably not provided a lease, and are simply looking for a handout.
laundry_queen
(8,646 posts)That's what parents are for - to be that 'soft place to fall'. As a mother of 4, I can't ever imagine charging my kids rent (heck, when I was married, my IL's stayed with us for 6 months when they moved to our town, rent free, until they were able find a place of their own), you help them out. And hopefully, if I needed help, my kids would do the same.
When my ex cheated and left me as a single mom of 4, I had to move in with my parents (at their urging - turns out later they just wanted the grandkids closer and lied to me about their motives for having me live with them). They charged me rent. And not a small amount either, it was almost the going rate for an apartment and was more than a quarter of my child support. In the meantime, I was trying to save up for tuition so I could go back to school, but it was nearly impossible, as my parents kept making me pay for more and more, as they complained we ate too much, so I had to pay all the groceries too, even though the original agreement was 'room and board'. Then they kicked me out because they decided they were sick of us, and I quote, "ruining their lifestyle". Luckily my ex helped me get some money together so I could find a place to rent on short notice. For the record, my parents are narcissistic (had a psychologist tell me as much) and are quite well off and don't NEED the money. And it's not like we were hellish roommates or something. My kids are all very well behaved (rave reports from teachers, friend's parents, straight-A students etc) and loving. Sure they were a bit messy, but I made a concerted effort cleaning constantly to help keep the disruption to my parents to a minimum. And my parents have a vacation home on a lake lot that they spent the weekends at, plus I took the kids to the park every night, so my parents hardly saw us at all anyway.
Put it this way - when I hear of a parent treating a child like the parent in the OP - no matter if that child is 18 or 20 or 24 - my mind right away thinks, "selfish parents, no empathy, probably shouldn't have kids, probably narcissistic and that child's life has been hellish behind closed doors" It doesn't 'teach' a teen anything to force them to pay rent while they are still in school. I'm not talking about 30-somethings laying on your couch or playing video games all day either - I'm sure there are times when a parent does have to put their foot down. This doesn't sound like that type of scenario at ALL When a child has hit hard times, or is still in school, your job as a parent is to help them through with minimal hardship to them (esp with regards to student loans).
When I was 12 and started babysitting for money, my parents said that now that I was making my own money, I was responsible for buying my own clothing. When I got my first job at 14, I was told now I could pay them back for the piano they bought me when I was 11 (a used piano, taken out of my savings account where my birthday money went as a kid) and my lessons. At 16, I saved up and paid for my own first car, and paid insurance and registration and gas on my own, no help at all from my parents. When I went to university, I won scholarships and had my first year paid for. When my second year came around, and I asked my parents for help paying my tuition (I was unable to get a student loan - as my parents made too much money), and I only had a minimum wage jobs that barely paid for my car (which I needed, as I was a 30 min drive away from the university, with no bus service), they said, "maybe you should've saved up for university all those years that you worked instead of spending your money on frivolous things."
Some parents set their kids up for failure. The parents in the OP sound like those type of parents. Part of being successful is knowing you have people behind you who love you unconditionally. Parents who purposely make life more difficult for their kids (not talking chores here either, by the way) as they try to make their way in the world are failures as parents.
oops, sorry that got kind of long. I'm very passionate about this topic, as you can tell.
Tsiyu
(18,186 posts)It's stressful enough being a high school student, but having to worry about paying rent as well, seems really a bizarre demand these parents make.
How sad that they treat their own child like a stranger - how awful the way your parents treated you and then your kids.
Strange ideas about parenting do abound.... as you said - they set their own offspring up for failure.
Marrah_G
(28,581 posts)I see nothing wrong with it, especially since he earns more then I do. Young people learning responsibility is not a bad thing. He could cook, clean and do laundry before he graduated HS.
ProfessorGAC
(65,076 posts)I paid rent to my parents when i graduated from college. I lived at home, went to work, went to graduate school, and played in a band.
I did have one stipulation though. I told them if i'm paying room and board, ($125 a month in the mid-70's), then i come and go as i please, no questions asked. If i pay adult costs of living, i'm an adult, no matter that i'm still their kid.
They agreed and things went just fine.
But, i never had to pay anything while i was still in school. That seems the fair line of demarcation to me. Now, they probably wouldn't have charged me if i couldn't find a job, but a science degree in the mid-70's was pretty much a guaranteed paycheck.
GAC
No Vested Interest
(5,167 posts)what goes on within a given marriage, you really don't know what went on or preceded this decision. Don't judge.
Personally, this is not my style. Spouse and I were glad we were able to to pay for high school and college for our children.
obamanut2012
(26,080 posts)None.
No Vested Interest
(5,167 posts)More than you and I could imagine, just as what goes on in a given marriage has so many variables.
For starters - the child could have challenged the parent to do it;
The child could have caused serious damage to the house.
The child could have stolen from the parent.
The child disrespected the parent.
Perhaps the parent plans to give it back to the child a some time in the future.
The parent's parents did the same and the present parent feels he/she turned out well because of it - tough love theory.
Endless number of possibilities.
obamanut2012
(26,080 posts)The woman is quite proud of doing this.
Indydem
(2,642 posts)You don't know why she is doing this.
Quit trying to act like you've got it all figured out.
Earth_First
(14,910 posts)Just curious what level of understanding parenting is...
obamanut2012
(26,080 posts)Being a parent doesn't make one a good parent.
Charging a high school student room and board is quite disgusting, especially making them quite their activities to pay for it.
abelenkpe
(9,933 posts)Often it's the stuff one does after school that leads them to what they choose to do for their career after high school. Hope your friend isn't scuttling her kids dreams.
obamanut2012
(26,080 posts)There is a stepfather involved, but I hate to blame him, because he's also seemed really involved in his stepkids' lives. My friend said their whole family is really pissed about this, and she and the grandmother tried to pay the rent, but that was a no go.
Just weird.
anneboleyn
(5,611 posts)jberryhill
(62,444 posts)Seriously. I raised two of my own and several more who weren't and anything prefaced with "As a parent..." as if the ability to fuck imbued them with some kind of universal wisdom, drives me to distraction.
OldDem2012
(3,526 posts)...what difference does it make?
Lex
(34,108 posts)be a jerk to know one when you see one.
abelenkpe
(9,933 posts)She's lived off my mother and father her entire life and is easing her way into living off her kids. Why? Because she's a scumbag. She justifies it though by claiming she's teaching her son a lesson in finance blah blah blah. But everyone else in the family can see right through her pathetic scheme. I just hope and pray her son wises up and moves out and goes to college far far from home to escape.
obamanut2012
(26,080 posts)Unless they are emancipated or married (married minors are also allowed to buy adult magazines and sign most contracts).
Skittles
(153,169 posts)people really do not like being taken advantage of - I hope your nephew wises up too
laundry_queen
(8,646 posts)glad people can see through it. She's probably a narcissist or is a sociopath (there are many who, instead of becoming CEOs or killing people, find ways to sponge off of others so they only need to put in minimal effort to live). Your poor nephew.
abelenkpe
(9,933 posts)He's so sweet and easy going. Sent him a 3D modeling and animation program for Christmas since he showed me a few minecraft environments he has built. I think he really has potential! He's also talked about becoming a chef. Hopefully he will find what he really loves and escape.
anneboleyn
(5,611 posts)I can't understand the selfishness of a parent who would play with a kid's future in such a manner.
ProudToBeBlueInRhody
(16,399 posts)I bet he's already learned that lesson.
Claybrains
(132 posts)My nephew just joined the Navy to escape his valley-rat mother's dependence on him. He is applying for the SARC program She took his checks, his phone and his car for her own use. He also help take care of his younger sister. Who knows what she did with the child support she got from my brother. Best decision he ever could have made.
abelenkpe
(9,933 posts)Long ago my father ran away and joined the navy. Good choice!
MrSlayer
(22,143 posts)And all that "adult" stuff as well? If you're going with this, you pretty much have to go all the way.
obamanut2012
(26,080 posts)MrSlayer
(22,143 posts)If she were out of school I'd see it as a way of pushing her out the door. I think that is also a fucked up thing to do, it's not the 50's anymore. Things are really hard out there now.
What happens if she doesn't pay? That's what I would lean toward if it were me being persecuted.
obamanut2012
(26,080 posts)For being such caring, loving parents, and for raising my sister and I good values, including empathy and compassion.
Especially after reading some of the responses to my OP.
Quantess
(27,630 posts)An acquaintance's mom made her and her brother get jobs and help out, because of financial strain. They were a one-parent household.
I wonder if there is a mortgage they are paying every month, that is a bigger financial strain than it appears to outsiders to be?
obamanut2012
(26,080 posts)A lot of single-parent households really struggle, but if the parents are struggling, it's their own damned fault. They both have great jobs, a huge house, and a beach house. So, they honestly could be struggling, but they don't need to be.
freshwest
(53,661 posts)An aunt and uncle gave up their apartment to move into my father's house, which still had a note to pay. All of my funds went to pay utilities, food, clothing, etc. from the age of 14 and up. They were both retired and not getting much, but didn't want me to work outside the home, they wanted me to concentrate on school.
After I graduated from high school at 18 and was going to college, we had a problem. I left and had to get jobs to pay for my rent at an apartment, food, etc. while the elders kept the house and I continued college. Everyone's situations is different.
Looking at our home and all of that, or myself when I left and rode a bike to college because it was too far to walk and I couldn't afford the bus, some might think there was no financial strain, but there was. People adapt, life goes on.
Good luck to all of the people in the OP. We'll never know all of what is going on, but it's an interesting thread to see how other people live.
No Vested Interest
(5,167 posts)freshwest
(53,661 posts)It was also a different era than now. Nonetheless, i did not consider that to be difficult at the time, and was grafeful to have a roof over my head and the opportunities and job protections that the late sixties and early seventies afforded many of us. I never find it useful to complain, just find solutions. My elders were also orphaned at an early age. As I said, people adapt. Many people would do well to count their blessings they take for granted. My life has seemed to be full of them, I guess it's just the way I was taught to get through life.
No Vested Interest
(5,167 posts)It was a different era.
I recall reading stories of parents who put their children out of the home during the children's teen years, because the parents could no longer afford to keep them. - This was more likely during the early 1900's and earlier.
I had it rather easy growing up, and some would say my kids did too, though I did strongly encourage them to earn money, by delivering papers, baby-sitting, etc., which they did. I don't believe it hurt them.
I also was in a position to hire teenagers - 14-17 yrs - for what was usually their first job. I always felt that those that were hired - there was usually a good size pool of applicants- had been given a great opportunity, in that they learned what the work world was like re being punctual, following instructions in a timely manner, courtesy to employer, employees, and customers, etc.
iemitsu
(3,888 posts)I was thinking that the young woman, being charged rent by her mother, has had her life complicated by this situation but that she would survive the experience. As a teacher in a public high school, I have seen negative the effects of a part-time job on academic performance. But I have also seen students survive and thrive when their home-life and familial support systems seem problematic.
The young woman paying the rent will learn lessons from this expectation whether or not what she learns is what her folks intended but she will do better, dealing with the situation, if those around her don't engage her in a pity-party.
Everyone's life is different. We can only make the best of our circumstances.
Kaleva
(36,309 posts)Room and board were covered by the work I did on the family farm but anything beyond that was out of my own pocket.
obamanut2012
(26,080 posts)Unless it's something crazy expensive and trendy they want, like Uggs or whatever.
Kaleva
(36,309 posts)But I didn't have it like my grandparents who worked when young and still living at home at any job they could get and all their money went to their parents (my great-grandparents). Even my father and my uncles were expected to contribute to the family's income but they were allowed to stay in school and graduate unlike my grandparents who had to drop out by the 6th to 8th grades.
freshwest
(53,661 posts)The boys got jobs in the oil fields because that was all there was. Eventually they all moved to the city because they lost the farm and were starving as it was.
The males got union jobs to start and finished their education later. One worked his way up to VP of a large corporation, one stayed in his union job until retirement, the other went into business for himself.
Now the union jobs are few and that diploma and more had better be in hand. The females worked in various jobs but never made as much money as the males. It worked out, but that was a long time ago.
Marrah_G
(28,581 posts)exboyfil
(17,863 posts)I would have my kids work because it enhanced their chances in the future (for example I am eyeing an engineering internship for my daughter after she finishes High School because she will have her first two years of engineering done), but the employer would value paid employment a lot more than more extracurriculars or volunteer activities which is good. Colleges should do the same - kids who work to help with expenses should be valued more than kids who spend months overseas or even volunteer or do a unpaid internships. Poor and lower middle class kids don't have those opportunities. if they hit the grades and work a lot they should be valued as much or more than someone who plays varsity sports etc.
slackmaster
(60,567 posts)We have no way of knowing all the details of the living arrangement in question, nor is it proper to care.
obamanut2012
(26,080 posts)I also don't agree that people can do with their kids whatever they want. I'm glad that, as a society, we have evolved past that to a great extent, as well as our laws.
Of course it is "proper to care" how someone treats their kids.
slackmaster
(60,567 posts)So her parents can impose on her whatever lawful restrictions and conditions they want to in their home.
Of course it is "proper to care" how someone treats their kids.
If they were enslaving her or requiring an unreasonable amount of work from her, I'd care a lot. But all I know is they are charging her rock-bottom rent.
treestar
(82,383 posts)would have the noncustodial parent paying child support until the child graduates - it doesn't stop at 18 if the child is still in high school.
There may be, in many states, a duty to support for married parents, too. 18 or finishes high school.
tabasco
(22,974 posts)I LOL'd.
jberryhill
(62,444 posts)obamanut2012
(26,080 posts)Just so I'm not accused of abandoning the thread.
liberal_at_heart
(12,081 posts)She is going to start receiving SSDI checks directly to her and not to us. We still need some of that money to help pay rent, so she is going to open a checking account and pay us rent. She only has about six months left in high school. After that the SSDI checks stop and she is hoping to get an apartment with a friend near the college she wants to go to. Luckily we were told by the Social Security department that the money in her 529 can stay there until she is ready to use it for tuition. I'm not sure why someone would do this if the child is not receiving disability. I think that children should be supported by their parents until they graduate high school, but I guess some people want to make sure their kids are ready for the cold, cruel world by making them pay as soon as they are an adult whether they are still in high school or not. I would much rather my daughter study for finals and get ready for the SATs than work.
ananda
(28,866 posts)If the parent could wait for the money, the child might be able to get into a better college with significant financial aid, owing less after graduating. The parent could say, you can pay me back by getting a good job out of college.
But if the parent wants or needs the money now, that's a different story. The child might be able to get a menial job to pay the rent, but his or her studies might suffer, meaning more difficulty in paying for college or getting into a good one, which will hurt financially down the road.
KT2000
(20,583 posts)there was LTTE in our local paper where a woman bragged about teaching her kids responsibility in this way. She was proud to report she withheld comforts from her children to teach them but she sounded sick to me. There was a touch of sadism to her satisfaction.
There are also parents who do not want their children to do better than they have done. I wonder if the parents of your friend are like this. If the child is having to shortchange her academics to satisfy the room and board, the parents either do not know what it takes for kids to excel at school now or they want to sabotage her. My guess is the parents are pretty good at withholding love as well.
I know a woman who was raised like that. She had to pay for all the food she ate while she was in high school. She worked 3 part-time jobs. The subconscious message was that she was not of the class that should go to college. She did indeed learn responsibility for herself but she was also hurt in a way that has left a permanent scar on her heart.
Cruelty comes in many forms.
laundry_queen
(8,646 posts)Everything you said is SPOT on. So sad to see some of the replies in this thread.
KT2000
(20,583 posts)to get bashed judging from some posts.
(I'm a laundry nut myself!)
Logical
(22,457 posts)pstokely
(10,528 posts)?
Lone_Star_Dem
(28,158 posts)I was in HS still at the time. It ticked me off because they didn't charge my older brother until after he had graduated from HS. We were both charged $50 a week. Which was more than half of what I made per week at my part-time job.
CreekDog
(46,192 posts)I know a guy who was kicked out of his house at age 18 by his father, he was born in December, so this was during his senior year.
Not only did his father basically say, "Happy Birthday, you're a man now, get out!".
He had to go and move in at a friend's house for the rest of the year.
His dad was a pastor.
I think I was the first person who told him what his dad did was wrong.
larkrake
(1,674 posts)never got a penny for all that work, but I got a work ethic and never learned to drink, smoke or go thru boyfriends once a month. Nor was I ever a teenager, not sure that was a bad thing in the 60's.
liberal_at_heart
(12,081 posts)My daughter takes advanced classes and she spends as much time studying as others spend working. I feel completely confident that she has learned a strong work ethic by doing so many hours of studying on top of going to school for 7 hours. I'm also completely confident that she will be able to handle the workload her freshman year of college.
jberryhill
(62,444 posts)I wouldn't do it but, yeah, some folks do that.
We had one of my kid's friends move in with us when his parents did it. For all the downsides to having a spare teenager, it can be convenient to have an extra pair of grateful hands around when you need them.
In_The_Wind
(72,300 posts)My family wasn't poor. She took over 25% of my wages.
I worked weekends and a few school nights each week because I couldn't stand to being at home.
I moved out the same week I graduated from high school.
eallen
(2,953 posts)I can't reconstruct all the motivations in my family, when I was that age. But was glad to get out on my own.
NMDemDist2
(49,313 posts)you're paying rent'
did i mention i was 16?
i paid rent.
somewhere else. the emancipated minor paperwork was ridiculously easy in the 1970's. thank heaven!
liberal_at_heart
(12,081 posts)If your parents aren't going to take care of you, you might as well get out on your own and take care of yourself. At least they can't control what you do while denying you care.
LynneSin
(95,337 posts)The parents are being selfish assholes and probably jeopardizing their daughters chance of a good college.
I know my mother was going to charge me rent but that was AFTER I had graduated college. And she was really cool about it. She was going to give me 3 months after graduating and then it was something really reasonable she was going to charge me. Like $50 or something. She just felt that at that point I was an adult and I could contribute to the monthly bills. I felt it was a common sense choicel.
anneboleyn
(5,611 posts)Kids this age need to focus entirely on school and then college. It is very hard to make up a college degree later -- and then try to make up for years of lost job experience and/or training. Any parent who would jeopardize a kid's future like this has very serious issues.
eridani
(51,907 posts)--at least in the small town Midwest. It was considered the norm for kids to pay rent if they quit school, though.
Nye Bevan
(25,406 posts)This is most outrageous thing I have ever heard of.
TheDebbieDee
(11,119 posts)It's just enough rent for him or her to know that he/she can't live anywhere for free!
choie
(4,111 posts)(sorry I don't remember who), with rights come responsibility. Have any additional rights been granted this kid who has to pay for room and board?? Since she's being treated like an adult now, can she come and go as she pleases? Eat what she wants for dinner? Have sex in her parents' house? I somehow doubt it. Come on - she's still a kid - she should be focusing on school work and enriching herself by taking part in extracurricular activities. The rest is going to come soon enough...and yes, I am being judgmental...so there...
liberal_at_heart
(12,081 posts)and throwing them into the adult world and expecting them to work and go to school at 16,17, or 18 is like throwing a baby to a pack of wolves. The chance of success is diminished. Sure there are those out there that have enough determination to see it through, but statistics for people completing college while working are not good. The majority will not complete college, so all of these life lessons may teach them how to work at McDonald's but probably won't give them the support they need to really succeed. No, my kids will get all the help I can give them.
jberryhill
(62,444 posts)First off, do the relevant zoning, municipal code, county code, or deed restrictions permit rentals in that neighborhood?
Betcha anything they are not reporting the income. Again, the municipality, state, and certainly the IRS may find that interesting. There may even be relevant rental taxes they are not paying.
It is also a certainty that their homeowner's insurance isn't providing adequate coverage, and that they require additional coverage.
TheBlackAdder
(28,209 posts)My eldest turned 18 this month and her job is being a student and trying to get into a good college.
A parent who does that probably does not value a college education, trying to explain away the charges as 'teaching responsibility', when really it's their cheapness that is coming out. I bet their parents did the same thing and they think it will build her character - thinking that the way they were raised is the proper way.
Doing this is highly indicative that there will be little to no parental support for the kid's college expenses.
The father probably doesn't have the balls to stand up against his wife.
===
(Regarding the non-poor household... you'd be surprised what financial currents lie within that household.)
Beaverhausen
(24,470 posts)This story is bullshit. Not that it doesn't happen, but something here isn't right.
KT2000
(20,583 posts)This does happen. If you do not believe it, come to my neck of the woods and see first hand. Lots of homeless teens.
Beaverhausen
(24,470 posts)Like I said I'm sure this happens, but I don't believe this particular story. At the very least no one knows enough to be able to make a judgement the way some are.
No Vested Interest
(5,167 posts)Surely, anyone not in that home doesn't know all the details.
The person only knows what he/she hears and perceives.
Pretzel_Warrior
(8,361 posts)idiot parents abound.
theKed
(1,235 posts)my parents did this for me (Note: I choose my words carefully...for not to). And, someday, I will do this for my children, as well. The adult world is not like the student world, and working a regular job is not like going to class - oh, sure, both can require discipline, planning, time management, work ethic; but that's as close as it comes. The demands of a job with a boss and coworkers is not at all similar to a high school or college environment. And, yet, once school is over, every child will face that new world. Some will cope well, some will not, some will have had a modicum of preparation for that scary new world.
liberal_at_heart
(12,081 posts)on ruining their chances of finishing or even starting college if you require them to pay rent while going to high school.
mikiturner
(592 posts)Thought experiment: Here in Washington (and I'm sure other states), if the parents were divorced, and one of them were paying child support, the general rule is that you have to pay support until the child turns 18, OR graduates from high school, whichever is later (not talking about kids who fail and/or get held back, so set those kind of issues aside). So a paying parent could NOT get away with saying, "well, you turned 18, so no more child support." The rule is that child support is for the benefit of the child, NOT the parent.
I wonder what would happen if the child here refused to get a job to pay "rent?" Could the parent kick the child out? Much like a divorced parent can't withhold support from a child because they hit 18 (assuming they are on track to graduate high school the following summer), I would question whether a parent could kick out a child the day they hit 18 or otherwise withhold support. I should do some research on that, but my thought would be they cannot.
liberal_at_heart
(12,081 posts)Kalidurga
(14,177 posts)It would probably be more expensive. But, no way I would live with someone pay rent and be treated like a child. Just not going to happen. I am sure the young lady could find a couple of kids in the same situation, my daughter knew of kids that paid rent when she was going to high school, so I am aware this kind of thing happens. Anyway, this is what I would do. But, then again it took no arm twisting for me to leave my parents.
HEyHEY
(45,977 posts)We always had the deal that if we were in school rent was free. This poor girl is only paying rent because she HAPPENED to be born at the wrong time.
I must say, my parents never paid for the education. However, I'm now 33, still got debt from getting an education and I can really see times where I've been held back because of it. When I have kids, I'll do my best to pay for their education.
cecilfirefox
(784 posts)Total. Utter. Low class BS.
GobBluth
(109 posts)I have 3 kids (12, 11, and 4). Mr. Gob Bluth and I decided that we would rather our children do volunteer activities/extracurricular activities, instead of working. If they choose to work during their high school years, then we decided that we will charge them "rent". Meaning we will take half their earnings and place them in a savings account for the child.
I do have a big problem though with your OP as written. Seems the child was doing great and now has to drop out of things that may enhance their upbringing. This is assuming that the child's family can afford for their child not to work. Lets face it. Times are getting tough for most families. I am hesitant to judge. It would be wonderful to say that a child's only job is to be a child. That doesn't seem to be the reality for most children though. Learning to sacrifice and contribute is also a great lesson and I am really unwilling to judge. I am the first generation that DIDN'T have to work to contribute to the family as a whole. Mr. Gob Bluth is the 2nd Generation that wasn't expected to contribute.
NYC Liberal
(20,136 posts)Two can play this game. As a tenant, she has legal rights. The parents cannot dictate what does and doesn't do in her living space there (at least to the extent that goes with any regular rental apartment/house). They want her out? They need to go through the eviction process in court.
I don't know what the relationship is like, but if I was the daughter and I wasn't worrying too much about the relationship, that's how I would treat this.