life

Parents Tire of Being Mom's and Dad's Warehouse for Adult Kids

Ask Someone Else's Mom by by Susan Writer
by Susan Writer
Ask Someone Else's Mom | August 27th, 2019

DEAR SOMEONE ELSE’S MOM: Our youngest is still in college, so my husband and I are okay with his stuff still being in the house, but his older brothers and his sister are now out on their own, in their own places, and although they did a pretty good job of taking their things with them when they left, they all have started bringing items here for us to hold onto until they have bigger homes in the future, whenever that may be. Are we wrong to stop taking any further additions? We want to downsize at some point, and that won’t be possible with all their stuff here. --- WAREHOUSE MANAGERS IN RESIDENCE

DEAR WAREHOUSE MANAGERS IN RESIDENCE: Getting ready to downsize can be a huge job, so why make it harder on yourselves? I think you’re perfectly right to shut the storage facility down. Suggest to your kids that they immediately stop collecting stuff until they’re ready to provide a more permanent place for it all, and recommend they find alternate storage ─ space sooner rather than later ─ for what’s already being kept with you. Make it clear you’re looking to downsize, and your home can no longer be their free climate-controlled warehouse.

life

Roomie with Benefits Wants More

Ask Someone Else's Mom by by Susan Writer
by Susan Writer
Ask Someone Else's Mom | August 22nd, 2019

DEAR SOMEONE ELSE’S MOM: My roommate and I have been together for nearly five years now, and our relationship has been what we’ve always understood to be “roomies with benefits”. Whenever neither of us is with someone else, we’re sort of together.

Lately, I’ve been wanting to make what we have more exclusive. Neither of us is seeing anyone else seriously right now, and I want to approach my roommate with the proposal that we make us official, but I’m afraid he’ll say no and things will get weird. How do I figure if we have a chance to be a long-term couple without risking losing it all? --- TWO’S COMPANY

DEAR TWO’S COMPANY: I’m not sure how you have kept it from being weird for the past five years. On-again-off-again relationships are certainly not rare, but your arrangement seems to beg complications.

You two have known each other a long time. If you can’t openly discuss your thoughts and feelings, then you’re probably not ready to make the commitment to monogamy with each other. Talk to him. It’s the only way you’ll find out what he thinks about you guys being a confirmed couple.

life

Husband Wigs Out Over Wife's Wig Collection

Ask Someone Else's Mom by by Susan Writer
by Susan Writer
Ask Someone Else's Mom | August 21st, 2019

DEAR SOMEONE ELSE’S MOM: Last year my wife had real issues with her hair. She had over-processed it (her stylist’s phrase) and it was getting brittle and looking kind of weird. She started doing all this stuff to get it back to normal, but in the meantime, she bought a wig that was really close to her own color. I thought it looked okay, but her own hair didn’t bother me, and I know she was starting to take better care of it.

That first wig started something. She got so many compliments on the way she looked with the wig that she decided to go out and get another one, just for fun. Six months later, she has spent nearly $3000 on wigs, and in the meantime her own hair is looking normal again.

I have hinted to her that maybe she’s overdoing it with the wig thing, especially since she doesn’t make the kind of money to be able to afford a $200 or $300 wig every few weeks. How do I convince her she doesn’t need and can’t afford all the wigs? --- WIGGING OUT IN TEXAS

DEAR WIGGING OUT IN TEXAS: Reassuring your wife that you think she looks good without the wigs may help, but if she’s sporting them to have some fun and feel good about the way she looks, that probably won’t get her to stop, and why should she?

My worries are the potentially detrimental cost of this expensive collection, and more importantly, that it may be an indication she’s not happy with her usual appearance. Hinting will only get you so far. Honestly letting her know your worries go beyond the superficial might be what she needs to understand you think there may be cause for concern.

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