Is it ok to kick kids out of the house at 18 years old?

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I was taught nothing at all, except that I was expected to hold a job, which I did. I was taught no cooking, how to pay bills, and all I knew about my first car (which I bought my self natch, was where to put the gas nozzle) I knew nothing about adding or checking oil, or changing oil. The motor seized when I had had it a mere two years.

I was complely unprepared when I was kicked out HS graduation night.

My parents hated me, and everyday my mom told me “it nearly killed me having you”.

Now I am completly alone, not taught about dating I am still single at age56.
I’m sorry to hear that. I blew up my first car engine too, since I didn’t realize the red warning light meant OIL NOW! It only lasted 6 months.
It’s awful that you were kicked out so young, but now that you are an adult, you probably know as much about dating as anyone else your age. You can no longer lay it on your parents’ shoulders that you are alone. There are plenty of lovely single ladies who would love to be friends with you. Get to know some of them, volunteer at your church, join a group that interests you (bicycling, politics, square dancing come to mind). There’s no reason for anyone to be alone who is not housebound.
 
Didn’t read the article. Don’t need to. I got the gist of it from the comments posted in this thread.

Everyone is different. What leads up to the (magical?) 18th year is also different. I have one older brother. When I was 14 and he was 18, our mother (who had raised us by herself after our parents divorced when I was 3 due to my father’s then-drug addiction) died after and 18 month battle with cancer. For my brother, who had moved out of the house 3 years earlier due to discipline problems (partying, drinking, etc.), he was already an adult, and living with our father. For me, I was pretty well devastated. The only parent I had ever really known was gone, and I didn’t have the foggiest idea how to deal with it. It probably set me back quite a bit emotionally and directionally, but also paradoxically probably also helped/forced me to grow up in ways that most 14 year olds probably don’t have to. In terms of life skills, I had already been doing laundry, washing dishes, etc. since I was 7 or 8 years old, so that didn’t change, and neither my mother or my father could really cook, so that didn’t change either.

But probably because of things like this and other family issues, my teenage years and early 20s were not quite as I’d thought they would be. I got a job by 16, but quit within 3 months after my father told me we’d be selling the house and moving away (it had too many bad memories of the wife he was in the middle of divorcing at the time). I also struggled with various long-term medical problems that had forced me to un-enroll from school for an extended period while I underwent extensive painful medical testing and treatment (the specialist I saw actually told me that I should’ve come to see her about a month beforehand, as the particular sickness I was suffering from can be fatal if not treated and diagnosed in time; whew!). I went through school for several more years as I struggled with juggling illnesses, jobs, and completing the classes needed to transfer to a four year university before finally succeeding a few years behind schedule due to all of these problems, but I finally DID do it and once I was out of the house/state, I excelled, completing a 4 year degree in 1 year and 9 months.

I don’t write any of this to excuse myself, as I’m sure there were some times I really was lazy, but I am very lucky, nay, blessed that I had (some) family who understood that I was progressing toward a goal, but needed some help and time to deal with some things that would be really hard for someone of any age to deal with. If you’ve got a kid who needs similar help, try to do what you can to encourage them to progress in their lives while recognizing that the timetable of life can get a little unpredictable at times, and it’s always better to be flexible for the sake of helping your kid have a successful life despite their obstacles than to be inflexible because the law and wider society has attached some mythical power to a more or less arbitrary number.
 
Since the parents chose to have children, they cannot kick them out. What kind of parent would do that?
 
I’m sorry to hear that. I blew up my first car engine too, since I didn’t realize the red warning light meant OIL NOW! It only lasted 6 months.
It’s awful that you were kicked out so young, but now that you are an adult, you probably know as much about dating as anyone else your age. You can no longer lay it on your parents’ shoulders that you are alone. There are plenty of lovely single ladies who would love to be friends with you. Get to know some of them, volunteer at your church, join a group that interests you (bicycling, politics, square dancing come to mind). There’s no reason for anyone to be alone who is not housebound.
I am for all extents and purposes housebound. I had a bad stroke 7 years ago, and am unable to drive a car, walk without a cane or walker, or work. I cannot bathe, dress, without assistance.

I survive on $700 a month SSI.

I am a former Franciscan, who met in the hospital a former Benedictine who was wroking there,who also cared for my dad, and dying gramma. He has taken me in and takes care of my grooming and medications, and who got me on medicaid and SSI.

It has been good how my life has worked out. And for that I thank God.

I would have made a bad husband. Since my stroke I am incapable physically of intimacy or fathering children, and am unable to work and need medical and other care.

If I had found a woman who is such a saint to take me in with all my limitations it would have been a miracle, and perhaps if I lived in an area with more Catholics or Otrthodox it would have been different. But that was was not to be.
 
My younger son turned 18 in October of his senior year in high school. Should I have kicked him out at that point? Where would he have gone? Why would any parent do such a thing, to a teen who is working hard, being responsible, and planning for college? I have never known such a person and I would actually take in any teen who had been kicked out by parents like that! Providing that the kid wasn’t using drugs or alcohol of course.

What a ridiculous line to draw! Our time with our kids is so short, it is only a season and then they are gone from us and living their own lives, never again to be permanently under our roof. No, I would not kick my kid out at age 18.*

*unless there was NO other alternative, and the teen was abusive, dangerous, needed more help than I could provide.
I was and it was rough. My stepfather decided he was done having kids in the house and that he wanted to live just him and my mom. Needless to say a lot of relationships were harmed and have never fully recovered.
 
Hi, Catholic Dude,

This seems (the way you have presented this question) to be arbitrary - and therefore , in my opinion, immoral under usual circumstances

Some ‘unusual’ circumstances would be if the off-spring was a danger to himself or others, if he fails to obey the rules of the house tht you have set, if he is intentional destructive to personal property and the like. Here we need to have some regulations like written agreements - as to what the code of house conduct will be. If these are broken, then the off-spring is showing he is not interested in staying.

Concepts like love and support that were previously mentioned need to emphasized. This is your child, your off-spring, and while he may be a pain in the neck at times - he is all the time yours.

God bless
HERE is an article that discusses the morality (Social Justice) of kicking children out of the house at 18 years old.

What are your thoughts on the matter?
 
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