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Parent Emeritus
Seeking edits/advice on not-quite-eviction notice (long - sorry)
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<blockquote data-quote="Acacia" data-source="post: 718233" data-attributes="member: 19832"><p>I have a difficult older son - 31. I started writing contracts when he was 16. I put a lot of careful thought into them and tried to be fair. He could care less. All of them were broken, usually pretty quickly. I kept wanting to give him another chance. Just visually looking at your contract, if he's anything like my son, he might not even bother to read it. It got bad enough that I told him he had to leave after high school when he was still 17. When it came to that, there was no more explaining, negotiating. It was just go. I told him I would pay for food and necessities. I've never let him move back in, and he's still just as difficult. It broke my heart, but I was sick and tired of being treated badly.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Acacia, post: 718233, member: 19832"] I have a difficult older son - 31. I started writing contracts when he was 16. I put a lot of careful thought into them and tried to be fair. He could care less. All of them were broken, usually pretty quickly. I kept wanting to give him another chance. Just visually looking at your contract, if he's anything like my son, he might not even bother to read it. It got bad enough that I told him he had to leave after high school when he was still 17. When it came to that, there was no more explaining, negotiating. It was just go. I told him I would pay for food and necessities. I've never let him move back in, and he's still just as difficult. It broke my heart, but I was sick and tired of being treated badly. [/QUOTE]
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Seeking edits/advice on not-quite-eviction notice (long - sorry)
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