hereyago
Miss My Boy Nubbs
- Joined
- Jun 20, 2008
- Messages
- 11,768
Very true, they have to be prepared to not let him back in and start that cycle again.
Very true, they have to be prepared to not let him back in and start that cycle again.
Drive him to a recruitment office and have him join the military. Sounds like he has some serious growing up to do.
the military isn't a dumping ground. What makes you think they'd want someone who works as little as possible, may have a substance abuse problem, and probably steals from those he lives with???
its a hard decision if y ou kick your son out most likely in his condition he will be living on the streets in a couple of months after the money you give him runs out. first you need to send your son to get help, a drug rehab center. than he might be a new man but he still will have no money to live on his own.
Move and don't invite him... especially if you downsize with no room for him. Or, you could convert his room into an office or anything that can't be used as a bedroom. Seriously. He could drag this act out for years to come.
If there are no squatters rights in their state, they can simply change the locks and tell him to leave, they can put his stuff on the curb. If there are squatters' rights in their state, they have to formally evict him, if they change the locks or remove his stuff, they can get into legal trouble. Tell them to file a police report about their belongings disappearing, check the local pawn shops and everything, if they find drugs in the home, photograph it and call the police. I just recently went through this.![]()
Obviously this would depend on their exact situation, but is it possible for them to sell their home (I'm assuming they own and don't rent) and move away? If they don't let him move into the new home, he'd have no claim to either the old address or their new one. It's an extreme solution, but if they were looking to downsize or re-locate anyway, now may be just the right time to go ahead with something like that. No sense in going through the trouble of evicting him if they are planning to move once he's out of the house. Just go forward with the move. They may be so locked into their son's problems that they've lost sight of the larger picture, like their own futures. If once they take a step back and see that, once free from their son, they'd more than likely move (for whatever reason) then that could be the solution they're looking for.
My aunt had to formally evict her son.
Who owns the problem here? Hint: It's not the boy. He's living where he wants to live, he's not working, he's eating . . . as far as he's concerned, things are fine. Mom and Dad, on the other hand, have a problem!
The "give me $2000 and three months rent" would just make me mad. It'd be a last-straw moment for me. I vote for next time he goes out, move all his stuff out into boxes on the front porch and change the locks. Then go away for the weekend.
I don't think the military is a good choice. They will drug test him and will turn him away. They aren't going to take on someone who'll have to go straight to rehab.