Oh the joys of being poor! No one expects you to be forking out all that for kids and most of the people I know are near the same financial footing as I am too. I had started a small gift trust for both my boys that came due when they were 21. It came to not even $2000 but I remember getting out of college, dead broke (worked my way through, no loans) and didn't have money for job interview clothes, no security deposit for an apartment, etc. so I wanted them to have a hand up for that. Other than that, no college was paid for by me as right around the time they were ready for collage is when I had to go on disability. When one got married, we traveled to the wedding, we gave them a check for $200 and I made them a quilt (approx. value $500-1000), when my son got a chance at a good deal on his first car, I loaned him the money and he paid me back including interest. I can barely pay my own mortgage, why would I be buying my kids a house? Let them earn it the hard way like I did.
I think so much has been distorted by the media and the types of shows and movies that people watch, the articles they read where the assumption is that all kids go to college. I see articles where pregnant parents have already started college funds. Does no one ever have a less than intelligent child that won't under any circumstances go to college? I was thrilled when my autistic son managed to go and get an associates degree by working his way through and college loans that he is still paying off--when he was young, I wasn't sure if he would even graduate high school! I think many of these desires to provide so much for kids is great to talk about, but not always in the best interests of the kids that really appreicate that first car since they earned it so that they know how much blood sweat and tears went into getting it.
I think so much has been distorted by the media and the types of shows and movies that people watch, the articles they read where the assumption is that all kids go to college. I see articles where pregnant parents have already started college funds. Does no one ever have a less than intelligent child that won't under any circumstances go to college? I was thrilled when my autistic son managed to go and get an associates degree by working his way through and college loans that he is still paying off--when he was young, I wasn't sure if he would even graduate high school! I think many of these desires to provide so much for kids is great to talk about, but not always in the best interests of the kids that really appreicate that first car since they earned it so that they know how much blood sweat and tears went into getting it.
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