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So he drops the retirement plan line, which is less an argument and more a declaration of ownership. It takes the parent-child relationship and flips it into a long-term extraction strategy, like parenting is an investment account that matures when the child feels like cashing out. And it’s said with that casual confidence people get when they have never had to test their nonsense against consequences.
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I (42F) told my 24-year-old son he has 30 days to move out after he called me “his retirement plan”
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Cue the relatives chiming in from a safe distance. Kids these days can’t afford to move out, which can be true, but it lands differently when the kid in question can afford new gadgets and restaurant meals. This isn’t about housing prices, it’s about somebody getting too comfortable being subsidized.
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Image is representative only and does not depict the actual subjects of the story.
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A 30-day cutoff is not heartless, it’s a hard reset. If a son wants to talk like a financial plan, a mother can respond like a budget.
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