Age to cut the kids off.

Your wife is likely the enabler and probably defends his excuses. You being a stepdad will be the “bad” guy. I would say you need to get your wife on board first, then sit down with the son and lay down the plan and consequences if he doesn’t meet the requirements.

If you just cut him off all of the sudden, your marriage may be next.
Probably wise. Very wise. Ima gonna edit my post.
 
Your wife is likely the enabler and probably defends his excuses. You being a stepdad will be the “bad” guy. I would say you need to get your wife on board first, then sit down with the son and lay down the plan and consequences if he doesn’t meet the requirements.

If you just cut him off all of the sudden, your marriage may be next.
So be it.
 
When they were done with college, they were invited to be the architect of their own life. Don't move back home, get a job, and make your own successes and some failures. They all did just that.
Agree with you @wwillson. Our youngest graduated last week and we told him we will continue to pay for his expenses until March. He starts working mid January so that should allow him to get a little cash saved up.

Of course we told him and he knows we aren’t going to let him fail miserably but a little struggling and difficult decisions are part of life. He’s $14,000 in debt after a 4 year marketing degree. $10,000 of which he owes to us. We wanted our kids to have some debt to help learn and make school serious.

Our kids have had way more support than my wife and I had leaving home after high school! That said it is a balance.

@burbguy82 our rule is simple. After high school you can live here cost free if you are doing post secondary education or saving money for a house. Otherwise you will be paying rent.

Just my $0.02
 
burbguy82 -

I can empathize with your conundrum to some degree. I have two kids; one's a go-getter and the other was a challenge to say the least. I say "was" because now that child is incredibly productive and hard working, but that wasn't the case in the teen years.

We drew the line quite early in life for them. We didn't give them anything; they had to earn it. Pay for chores around the house. No cell phone until they could afford the plan (we paid for the phones; they had to pay for the service). No cars until they could afford the insurance; not unlike the phones.

Each was told that they had to have a "plan" for their own lives at 18 after high-school. We would pay for college, trade schools, etc ... whatever they wanted to further their education. If they wanted to go into military service, we'd support that choice also. But living at home in the basement as some form of mutated parasitic slug was NOT an option.

One went to college and then grad school. Very successful; then and now.

The other struggled. Moved out, got into trouble, had life kicks in the gut. Bad choices resulted in bad consequences. But slowly, methodically, the dim light started to grow brighter. The "cause and effect" of life began to make sense. Whereas the mean ol' dad (me) was never to be trusted or believed, other adults who gave advice seemed to echo my teachings and so somehow, some way, the message began to sink in. This child who was a true drain on us emotionally and physically early on, now had started to turn life around. I recall a conversation with a person who actually ended up employing my child (unbeknownst to me at the time), stating what an excellent, motivated, brilliant person showed up to work every day. I was nearly floored; both proud and bewildered at the same time. Now, several years later, this same child is self-employed, doing well, and communicates with us willingly and semi-regularly. Not unlike a family-channel movie, life has turned out well.

My point is that sometimes you have to play the long game and make the adult decisions in your own life, and risk alienating the "child" to boost the "adult" in a person. Some folks will rise to the top merely as a means of self-directed achievement. Others need to understand that life isn't as easy as it looks on YT or FB.

Sadly, some kids never grow up, even with the best of guidance. Don't consider yourself a failure if, after years of proper teachings, your kid fails. I've seen it in my LEO career many times. Some kids won't transition into adulthood because too many other distractions get in the way, and pity/self-loathing seems easier than getting a job. Parents are to blame when they don't set rules or provide proper guardrails for development. But not all parents are to blame for wanton children; at times "you just can't fix stupid" (credit Ron White).

My advice is to draw a line and stick to it. Now is a better time than never. If you don't set the expectations and enforce them, growth is unlikely. And it's not going to be easy for you, either. It's tough to say no. It's hard to turn them away when they do stupid things.

If you lay down the law, and enforce expectations, there's no guarantee the kid will respond positively.
But if you don't make them grow up, there's a VERY high likelihood they won't ever mature on their own.

So, in all seriousness, I offer my life advice to you. Do the right thing. Even if it fails, at least you won't be the reason it failed and you can say you tried as best you were able. And it might just work out well in the end ... it did for us!

Hence, my long answer to your short question is this:
After they become 18, cut your kids off when they no longer are doing something positive to improve their own lives.
Thanks for this generous reply.

I very much agree with all of your points.

Yes two kids, one is fine and productive and the other a slug. I thing I think is heredity. Daughter is like her mother, and son is like his father. A real piece of work who...............you guessed it, at 50, still has his mom drive him around.
 
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I have no kids/want no kids so my views will be different versus a parent but my family is going through a similar thing....Let's just say I believe in:

pull your weight.

If they don't pull their weight then I'm not helping. Let them live on the streets.

As my dad told us lots of times, if you want to act like an animal then you can go live outside with the animals.
 
I’ve read through your original post, all of the subsequent replies, comments, and your amplifying posts. I am dad to three, and stepdad to three. All the principles of parenting remain the same, but the relationship is different when you are the stepdad.

I think I agree with the majority of posters, that it isn’t an age, per se, at which you “cut them off”.

Your question is much more about how you move a person from their selfish, lazy tendencies into adulthood in which they want to take care of themselves. Not really a chronological thing, not even a financial thing really, but more a how do you, as a parent, step parent, in this particular case, transform this kid into a positive productive member of society.

All three of my stepchildren are married, they have graduate degrees, and two of them have their own children. We have not “cut them off” - that happened naturally as they grew up and moved into responsibility.

We do still provide support for my youngest, who is 24, and in her second year of medical school pursuing an MD/PhD. I pay for her car insurance, a car, her cell phone, and I help her a bit with rent. She receives a monthly stipend from the institution where she is studying, and that meets almost all of her expenses. In that sense, she is very much on her own. She does not need our support, but the car affords her a balance and quality of life while she goes through a grueling eight year program. She uses the car to get out on the weekends and go ski, hike, etc. so in that sense, I’m not really supporting her basic needs, but I’m providing a bit more than she would be able to afford on her own.

I did the same for her older sister in medical school, and I didn’t “cut her off“ completely until she was about 30.

This is where balance and fairness comes in, my wife and I recently looked at that postgraduate support provided to the two girls, and decided that, even though none of the kids needed it, we would simply write a check, well, a series of checks, to level up the degree of support we had provided their siblings while in school. What’s interesting is that the other kids objected to the gift saying “we don’t need it“.

All that to say, that we do provide support past the age at which most of the other folks have suggested you should cut someone off. However, we have been successful with transitioning the kids into responsible adults.

So, it’s not the age per se.

I think the issue is one of setting boundaries. Of setting expectations. Firm but fair, unyielding in your resolve. It’s just like watching a master sergeant with the young soldier who grew up with out boundaries in his own home. That kid is gonna need some. And the firm but fair hand of an experienced adult.

I’m not suggesting that you’ve done anything wrong. You’ve been dealt a difficult hand to play.

But think back to your experiences with the young men that showed up in the army as immature children, and how the army, as an institution shaped them. Those young men were given guidance, boundaries, and structure. Held accountable. There were consequences to short falls in expectations.

Think about the actions and example of the senior leaders that you saw help shape those immature young men into the responsible adults and soldiers that they are today. I think that’s your best bet for how to approach this problem. Clear expectations. Clear boundaries. Clear consequences. Firm, but fair. Your wife has to be on board with this too, or it’s gonna be extraordinarily challenging.

I wish you the best of luck.
 
What's the job market like in your town? In your town, no commuting required. Saying "get into a trade" is tough because tradespeople drive everywhere, unless you have a mobile home factory or something. And it's hard getting into an entry level position not driving because there are already a couple non-drivers (OUI) at every business that the boss has to figure out what to do with.

Dude could work as an Ed Tech at a school. CNA at a nursing home. Grocery store. Subway. He needs help with his imagination.

I agree with the "soft start" philosophies that have worked with others. It's hard starting out on your own with no savings, trying to rent or buy a place while setting up life and many stumble a little. OPs kid has had plenty of "soft" already though and hasn't taken the hint.
 
Already high on my long list of reasons not to have kids.
I’m sorry, but I really have to disagree. The most rewarding moments in my life, the ones that I cherish the most, are the ones that revolve around my six children. Seeing their successes, seeing who they’ve turned out to be, spending time with them, that’s what’s really important.

I’ve got to do some really cool stuff in my life, and I wouldn’t trade my life for anything else. But my life would be empty without those six kids, and now, their spouses, and their children.
 
I’m sorry, but I really have to disagree. The most rewarding moments in my life, the ones that I cherish the most, are the ones that revolve around my six children. Seeing their successes, seeing who they’ve turned out to be, spending time with them, that’s what’s really important.

I’ve got to do some really cool stuff in my life, and I wouldn’t trade my life for anything else. But my life would be empty without those six kids, and now, their spouses, and their children.
Yep, this will be our first Christmas at my son’s house - there will be little faces lighting up brighter than the tree 🌲
 
No human is irretrievable!

Speaking strictly to an earthly viewpoint, I would disagree. I agree that MOST humans are able to reform themselves if they put effort into it. But not all, as your statement would imply.

There are some who, despite all efforts, resist good efforts and end up essentially worthless, and potentially doing evil. Some folks will drink themselves to death, no matter how many times they run the program. Some will forever be slugs and would walk away from a well-paying just because they just can't seem to put the effort into it. Some folks can't muster enough intelligence to survive the streets. The list goes on and on ... I've seen it first hand more times than I'd want to recall. I worked as a detective for a few years in sex crimes; some of those folks are undoubtedly past any hope.

Not to say that this hard line exists for burbguy82's problem; the child he speaks of is probably not "evil", but just lazy. There's a distinct difference.
 
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Make him work off his room and board.
Dishes, cut grass, clean the house ect
Change the internet password.
Make him want to leave
 
burbguy82,

What exact eye problem(s) does he have ?
What official medical diagnosis does your stepson have ?

I have a few ideas in my head that I’m thinking of…..
 
I've been going through this myself, with my son, and trying to figure out how to motivate him to do more--long before his age, I was out doing my own thing. I don't think I have paid less attention to him than I got? as one of the gen X latchkey kids, I think I ignored him like I was... that's not insult to anyone, it's just the way it was, got kicked outside to play or there was simply no one home and I was on my own. Only thing is, I guess I didn't have a computer or any iDevices until college.

Sometimes I think entertainment is a drug, which is to include music, TV, games... especially computer games. Anything that alters our behavior is a drug of some sort, right? Having to listen to music in order to accomplish some task, having to get the TV on at the right time so as to not miss a game or show (think back to before DVR's let alone streaming)... might not be heroin but you get the idea. Some of it's benign (listening to music while working is a bit like one's morning coffee) and others worse.

My son is disabled and is special case as a result, so tough love only goes so far. He has moments where I think it starts to shine through, and he's just simply a few years behind. Then again the world is a bit different now and that does change things a bit. No simple answers.
 
burbguy82,

What exact eye problem(s) does he have ?
What official medical diagnosis does your stepson have ?

I have a few ideas in my head that I’m thinking of…..
He and my wife, and to a lesser degree my daughter have a hereditary disease, with a long name. It effects the optic nerve, and to date is not treatable. The issue is not with the eye.

Open to ideas.
 
If you are not doing it, consider charging rent, not a crazy amount but just enough to send the message and further adult steps could be taken. It doesnt sound like is happening now, but its a decent start.

I have 3 kids in their mid teens, 1 will likely be dependent on us for life which we accept. We are going to try and let them stay in the house and rent it to them (just enough to cover utilities and property tax) while they go through college and the wife and I will relocate to land somewhat nearby. We'll know in a few years if that is realistic.

Good luck with your situation.
 
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