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What Do You Think Of People In Their 30s Who Still Live At Home With Their Parents ?
Nunziosoprano asked:
I have a cousin who is 31 and he has never left the nest. He doesn’t leech off his parents though, since he has a job working as a baggage handler at the airport.
I have a cousin who is 31 and he has never left the nest. He doesn’t leech off his parents though, since he has a job working as a baggage handler at the airport.
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16. December 2008 at 12:58 pm :
A loser…and a nobody. Sorry if i offended you. But you wanted people’s opinions.
16. December 2008 at 3:21 pm :
That they’re family oriented. Or maybe they’re lucky to have great parents that will allow their child to live at home while the adult child saves money for their own place. Nothing wrong with it.
19. December 2008 at 4:28 pm :
Welcome to the future of american youth.
22. December 2008 at 2:42 am :
Unless your a doctor or lawyer, it is almost impossible to support yourself these days on one income. I don’t know anyone that can pay an $800 dollar house or rent payment, pay a $200 to $400 a month gas/electric bill, pay a $100 a month for car insurance, pay for gas, food and car repairs plus clothes and phone, on an $8.00 to $10.00 an hour job after taxes. I’d say he has some nice parents, and as long as they don’t mind him being there, why should I care? It isn’t any of my business. You are going to find stuff like this becoming more and more common in the future, because the rate of inflation is rising much faster than our payscales are, it won’t be long before we become overwhelmed, and the middle class become the poverty stricken.
22. December 2008 at 4:19 pm :
He has nice parents who aren’t going to kick him out of the house the way some would.
Or maybe his parents never cut the umbilical cord?
Does he not like that he’s still at home?
If he seems resentful , he may have been a bit spoiled and he knows it.
22. December 2008 at 7:35 pm :
Why is it necessary to throw all your money away on extra on housing and utilities. We will see more of this in the furture as jobs leave, incomes decline, and prices on goods, services, and medical care rise.