Internet backs man who wont let parents move in

My (37m) family comes from and is a long line of doctors, being a doctor is the only acceptable profession in their eyes and anything aside from that is met with literal abandonment.

Which is what happened to me when I turned 17 and told my family I was NOT going to be a doctor but to build an acting career / social media career (youtube wasn't huge then) and supplement my income with small business endeavours. When I told my family this they kicked me out and we subsequently lost contact for 17 years.

During time they moved to the UK and my sister became a doctor and my older brother got into a very competitive stream for surgery (neurosurgery specialising in spinal tumour diagnosis and removal), which he has now finished. We reconnected when COVID hit and they told me they were moving back to Sydney for lifestyle reasons and because my brother has found a $750k a year job.

During the last 2 years they never asked me how my acting career / social media stuff went, and basically assumed I was just slumming in it Sydney. To their credit they were correct in that I didn't "make it big" in acting (maybe the world wasn't ready for a main stream leading role Indian...), or make it at all. I did however "make it big" as an investment banker and recently made partner at the bank I work.

This came to head on Friday when I met them for house shopping (I walked to meet them, and when they asked about my car, I just said I preferred to walk), and they realised the areas they wanted to live; despite being highly paid medical professionals, simply wasn't going to be happening, as the houses cost north of $20m. When we decided to call it a day and regroup they suggested going to my place before going out to dinner.

When we arrived at my house they thought I was renting a room and enquired how much rent was, I informed them that I wasn't renting and that this was my house. They lost their shit, accusing me of lying to them for years and only meeting up to rub their face in my "probably illegally gained" wealth, and capped it off by informing me that they'll be living with me now instead of with my oldest brother, since they can't be seen living in a worse house then their son.

I laughed at them and reminded them that they bet on my brother and sister not me, and that they have a better chance of living with my neighbours than me. At that point they threatened to "cut me out of their will", to which I reminded them of the fact that they can't even afford to buy it my area, so their will and assets don't really matter to me.

Now they aren't talking to me, and my brother and sister are saying I should have been proactive in letting them know of my success (I have a public linkedin profile, so they literally never googled me).

Edit. Getting a lot of hate about including the terms social media influencer in my post. To clarify, this was 19 years ago, and I believe social media influencer is probably the updated term for socialite. I wanted to be famous, but I had no real skills or plan ad to how I was going to achieve that goal... like most social media people.

Edit 2. A lot of people are critical that my family just kicked me out or that it's unlikely a parent would do this. Obviously I wasn't a great child in their eyes in general and this was the final straw so to speak. Also desi parents are a different level of parents... from washing your fathers feet, to not speaking unless spoken to, not allowed to talk to opposite sex and viewing the head of house as an almost God figure, it's a bit different. Desi parents are also incredibly strict, not like your room needs to be clean strict, but like clean the entire house, wash the cars, wash iron everyone's clothes or you are getting beaten with a broom.

For the people talking about house prices, yeah Sydney is wack, House prices jump around a bit too of course, but generally speaking if you live in a house on the harbour it's wasn't cheap. Our former PM lived in a $70m to $90,? House at Point piper.

Internet backs man who wont let parents move in

Maybe you heard about the 30-year-old New York man whose parents, tired of politely and repeatedly asking their unemployed son to move out of their home, took him to court in May to legally evict him -- and won.

That case was extreme. But according to recent Pew Center research, millennial adults (also called "boomerangs" for their increasing habit of moving back to their childhood homes well into their 20s and 30s) are the first generation in more than 130 years to show a larger subset living with parents than with a spouse or partner. As of 2017, that figure was 32.1%, compared with 31.6%, respectively.

Susan Newman, PhD, a social psychologist and the author of the book Under One Roof Again: All Grown Up and (Re)Learning to Live Happily Together, says rising student debt and putting off marriage are just two things that cause millennial adults to return to the family nest.

What's needed when they do? Emotional, social, and financial guidance -- especially for parents, who should lead the transition, says Newman.

"Come up with an exit plan right away," she says. "Ultimately, the idea is for the adult child to leave again. Ask about goals, job aspirations, life direction. Revisit it every 6 months. And be realistic: Consider what is truly achievable in that time frame."

She also suggests that house rules be set from the get-go. "Your child is not a guest. But don't allow dollars to dictate your relationship. If they can't afford to help pay for the utility bills, maybe they can mow the lawn or help in other ways," she says. "For best results, let them choose their own chores -- they're more likely to get done that way."

Same goes for parental boundaries. "It is your house," Newman says. "So, if your child smokes (or vapes) and you don't like it, you have every right to set limits. If they stay out late, you can ask for, and expect, a phone call or text so you don't worry. If you don't want your adult son having sleepovers with his girlfriend, say so."

But parents must remember their kids are no longer children, she stresses. "They're adults, so you must cede control. They may have different attitudes, needs, and eating, sleeping, or partying habits than they did when they were younger. Accept those differences. And don't fall back into mommy mode," she says. "They can do their own laundry and clean their own rooms. And do respect their privacy."

4 Tips

Empty nesters? Not so fast! A new London School of Economics study reveals parents lost a degree of "control, autonomy, pleasure, and self-realization" when their adult kids returned home. How can they maintain happiness as boomerangs unpack?

  1. Adjust your attitude."You didn't fail as a parent, and your kids didn't fail, either," says Newman. "Some of your friends may actually be jealous" about the time you're spending with your adult children.
  2. Maintain your schedule. "Don't give up your social life to accommodate an adult child," she warns. You don’t have to rush home at 6 p.m. to cook for them, for instance.
  3. Enjoy future insurance. "The silver lining? Down the road, adult children are more likely to care for parents who helped them during tough times," she says.
  4. Enforce the exit. Newman's verdict? "If after 2 years your adult child is showing no progress," she says, "it's OK to nudge them" out of the nest once again.

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