<p>Big dose of sympathy? Egad sons being a whiney brat. And maybe he and his adult friends will have to join the world of grownups where plans are actually made.</p>
<p>Lives change and it’s important to learn to cope and not try any control others until ou adjust.</p>
<p>Yes it’s strong but he doesn’t want to have parents have a better life because it might inconvenience his fun time…yeah thats a whiny brat. All about him. Sometimes we parents need a reality check of how we don’t need to make it all about the kids, especially the adult ones in college. Most adults wino care aboutnparents would have said awesome mom and dad, You can count on me to help you move</p>
<p>On the other hand DD keeps asking me when we are going to sell the now oversized 6 bedroom house and move to something smaller so we stop wasting so much energy…</p>
<p>Maybe he just needs some time to get used to the idea. Some of us dislike change, good or bad, especially when it comes out of the blue.</p>
<p>We moved when both of ours were in college - after my D’s first year, moved from Texas to Alaska, and after my S’s second year, moved from Alaska to Australia. They survived.</p>
<p>As others have said above, just because that is what he said, it may not be what he means. It might be a difficult adjustment. It shouldn’t prevent her from moving, but no need to call her son names, IMO.</p>
<p>Omg difficult to come home to a house 20minutes away? Seriously.?</p>
<p>She asked what we parents thought and he reacted like an year old. Sometimes parents need to snap out of it. No one is dying. No one getting divorce. His first reaction was how it would make him work a wee bit harder to hang out with his friends. </p>
<p>Mom wanted to let go of feeling bad and if she reads that some people think her kid needs to be happy for her and not get all pouty. He’s a grown man.</p>
<p>In 1980, my mom across the country when my brother was a sophomore in college. My siblings and I had already graduated, so he was the one hold-out. My mom felt SO guilty, but moved anyway. I think my brother was in a tizzy at first, although he wouldn’t dare have a hissy fit about it. My mom moved to an area that was essentially a retirement community, so finding a job post-grad would also be quite challenging.</p>
<p>In the end, he moved down south with my oldest brother, his GF came too, and eventually they married. They are happily together after nearly 30 years and everything worked out for the best.</p>
<p>I’m tempted to move to a smaller house, just to get the message to our kids that it’s time they became independent.</p>
<p>I’m guessing it will all work out just fine. There will be a period of adjustment, but soon it will be the “new normal”. Lucky you to have found “the” perfect house.</p>
<p>Oh good grief! Tell DS to put his big boy pants on and suck it up. 20 minutes? And tears!? Wow…</p>
<p>My parents moved me the summer before my Sr year in High School and then twice while I was in college. These were moves states away. Kid gets NO sympathy from me!</p>
<p>I completely understand both positions and believe you need to go forward with the move. We moved when our freshman son left for college - all the way across the country! When he is home now, he is 2000 miles away from his friends. He hates it here - everything about it. I just listen. How could he not hate it - he didn’t even see the house until December on his first trip home. He knew about the move and the reasons for it, but that doesn’t mean it was easy for him.
We did try to replicate his room in the new house and did consult him about a couple of furniture changes and the paint color, wanting to make sure he understands this is still home.
He just announced that he will never, ever live in this state. I also nod and understand. It’s just a time of so many emotions, but the adults still need to make the decisions. But I join the guilty party.</p>
<p>When my S was a college freshman, he commented about how surprising it was that the parents of many of his friends had just moved, and it seemed like such a coincidence to him. I explained that a bunch of the parents had probably been wanting to move for a while, and were waiting until their kids graduated HS. That thought had never occurred to him - he was only seeing things from the kids’ perspective.</p>
<p>I anticipate that I will probably move while D is in college - and more than 20 minutes away. I do feel slightly bad for her, since I know she won’t like it. But it won’t stop me from doing what makes sense for H and me. We’ve already sacrificed a lot to avoid moving while she is in HS.</p>
<p>Interesting. I managed to draw out a multitude of approaches to my post. And I have to lean more towards the stance that ds does not like change and we are a very “steady as she goes” family. So to put up his childhood home for sale, move away from his lifelong friends and tell him to “tough it up” is hard for me but I certainly wouldn’t change my plans for him. He will accept whatever we do. This caught him off guard as we had been discussing the plan to buy land and built in a few years. </p>
<p>I wonder if my over concern for his feelings has anything to do with the fact that I was moved as a junior in high school over an hour from my hometown to a summer home that my parents winterized. I entered school as a senior that fall, had to make all new friends in a rural school of about 300 kids and I lost contact with most of my old friends I’d known through my entire childhood. I don’t remember making a peep about having to move but on some levels, it surely had to have bothered me. Yes he’s college age but change is change for some people.</p>
<p>These are adults. They don’t seem to have any problem going pff to college, making all sorts of new friends, yet, they expect everything to stay the same, for what, ever?</p>
<p>People move…houses sell…paint colors change…furniture changes…perhaps not having changes growing up doesn’t make for strong adults. </p>
<p>Shouldn’t he be happy that the change is good for his parents? That the change is necessary? </p>
<p>Generations of kids moved across continents, with no Internet, imagine, and they survived and supported their families. To have adult kids make parents feel bad for doing what they have to do is to me, yeah, I’m gonna say it, bratty. </p>
<p>Bet it fun having a kid come home who hates it so much he makes you all feel like garbage? That’s a brat.</p>
<p>20 minute in the same town-- lol…my kids would have been thrilled w 20 minutes in the same town. We’ve had to move every 4 years to a different CONTINENT for my job. </p>
<p>Does your son expect to move back in and live with you for the rest of his life, even after he graduates, gets a job, gets married, and starts a family?</p>
<p>When I was a sophomore in college, my parents announced that they were moving across the country. They went from being an hour away from school, to a 6 hour plane ride. In that case, it was necessary for my father’s job (transfer.) In your case, it’s necessary for your financial future.</p>
<p>I was ok with it, and it was actually good for me - helped me to become more independent.
My older brother however (who was back home after graduating college) had a very hard time, and felt like they were abandoning him. He ended up moving in with another relative for a while, before he was able to get his feet under him.
I think that for some kids, it’s just hard to deal with change, and they take it personally. But it doesn’t mean that their feelings are justified, or that you are doing anything wrong. In your case, you certainly aren’t doing anything wrong. He’ll survive the 20-minute drive when he visits.</p>
<p>We’ve recently sold our home of 23 years, the only home our sons have ever known. We are renting nearby but plan to move five hours away in the next couple of years…whenever DH can find an appropriate job in our chosen location. </p>
<p>This is no surprise to our boys. They’ve heard us talk about it for ten years.<br>
I know it will seem odd to them to not be able to ever go back to the house they grew up in but they will be fine. They are making lives of their own now. Time spent visiting the parents is dwindling anyhow. If they want to come back to the hometown, they can stay with friends who are still here. That’s pretty much what they do now even though we still live here!
OP, get your dream house while you can. You might now get the same chance again.</p>
<p>crying? over a move? very strange. hopefully he was reacting to some other stressor in his life (that you don’t know about), or else he’s in for a bumpy ride…</p>