Haven
Super_Ideal_Rock
- Joined
- Feb 15, 2007
- Messages
- 13,166
I think these things depend entirely on the family's culture. My family is still a bit old world as I'm only second generation American, and for us it's normal for adult children to live at home until marriage. Many of my close friends are Greek and Serbian, and their cultures seem to be very similar to ours, as many of them lived at home until they were married.
As for me, my parents didn't have much money so I started working and paying for my own clothes and activities when I was 11 when I got my first babysitting job. I babysat every Saturday night from age 11 through my senior year of high school, and once I was 16 and bought my first car (a $1,000 nine-year-old Blazer, which I LOVED!) I got my first "real" job, too. I paid for my own school athletic fees and whatnot in high school, as well. My parents did give me lunch money, though.
I went away to college and my parents gave me $100 in quarters for laundry
and I was pretty much on my own, otherwise. (Thank goodness for financial aid.) I moved back in with my parents for four years after college so I could pay off my loans, and then bought a condo in the city on my own. HOWEVER, that purchase ended up being a mistake, because I then got a job teaching high school near my parents' house, so I essentially moved back in with them a year later. I sold the condo when my husband and I were engaged, and lived with my parents until we were married.
While living with my parents they never gave me any money, whatsoever. They did not pay for one bill, nothing. (And they shouldn't have!) I was working or in grad school (or both) that entire time, and I had means to support myself. I bought the house groceries and paid for other incidentals here or there, but I definitely saved A TON of money by living with them and not having to pay rent. And, they liked it because they thought that was the way it was supposed to be--the children live at home until they get married.
I guess I didn't really leave the nest until I was married, but I started paying my own way for most things when I was much younger, so it's a grey line for me. I love that I lived at home with my parents as an adult, because I think it transformed our relationship. I imagine the effect would have been different if I was living at home and relying on them to pay some of my bills, so I can't say if I would have enjoyed it that much in that case.
I think every child and every family is different. I have three sisters, and none of them have yet become financially independent from my parents. The next sister is having her car loan paid by my father, and her cell phone by my mother. And I think my parents took out loans to pay for most of their college expenses, as well. I think they didn't do that for me because they had less then, and also because I wanted to be financially independent from them much earlier, anyway. In my husband's family it's the same way--my husband became financially independent of his parents very early, yet to this day his brother still accepts money from his father. Different kids, different needs, I guess.
As for me, my parents didn't have much money so I started working and paying for my own clothes and activities when I was 11 when I got my first babysitting job. I babysat every Saturday night from age 11 through my senior year of high school, and once I was 16 and bought my first car (a $1,000 nine-year-old Blazer, which I LOVED!) I got my first "real" job, too. I paid for my own school athletic fees and whatnot in high school, as well. My parents did give me lunch money, though.
I went away to college and my parents gave me $100 in quarters for laundry

While living with my parents they never gave me any money, whatsoever. They did not pay for one bill, nothing. (And they shouldn't have!) I was working or in grad school (or both) that entire time, and I had means to support myself. I bought the house groceries and paid for other incidentals here or there, but I definitely saved A TON of money by living with them and not having to pay rent. And, they liked it because they thought that was the way it was supposed to be--the children live at home until they get married.
I guess I didn't really leave the nest until I was married, but I started paying my own way for most things when I was much younger, so it's a grey line for me. I love that I lived at home with my parents as an adult, because I think it transformed our relationship. I imagine the effect would have been different if I was living at home and relying on them to pay some of my bills, so I can't say if I would have enjoyed it that much in that case.
I think every child and every family is different. I have three sisters, and none of them have yet become financially independent from my parents. The next sister is having her car loan paid by my father, and her cell phone by my mother. And I think my parents took out loans to pay for most of their college expenses, as well. I think they didn't do that for me because they had less then, and also because I wanted to be financially independent from them much earlier, anyway. In my husband's family it's the same way--my husband became financially independent of his parents very early, yet to this day his brother still accepts money from his father. Different kids, different needs, I guess.