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  • The Visit That Never Ends

    THE VISIT THAT NEVER ENDS
    by Emily Yoffe

    Slate Magazine
    December 21, 2010 Tuesday

    Soon you'll be home for Christmas, sleeping in your childhood bed for
    a few days, or camping on some relative's basement sofa. Millions
    of Americans caught in the Great Recession, however, have been
    experiencing a visit home that never ends. They are living like the
    Waltons, the fictional Depression-era family that had three generations
    under one roof, and which frequently took in lost, flat-broke souls.

    We asked Slate readers who have had to return home or who have
    taken in friends or relatives to tell us what it's like to live in a
    multi-generational household. We heard from people who are now staying
    with grandparents, parents, in-laws, siblings, and friends. These
    impromptu arrangements can mean the difference between a warm bed and
    living in the car, but the experience is emotionally roiling. People
    described alternating surges of shame and gratitude, their relief at
    having a safe place to land tempered by worry about ever being able to
    get out. Many people wrote of unexpected, sweet moments of connection
    they never would have experienced in better times. But just as often,
    they hoped for those better times to return, so that they can get
    their stuff out of boxes and kiss their loved ones farewell.

    "Hey, Baby, I'm Unemployed and I Live with My Parents."One effect
    of the recession not captured by the Bureau of Labor Statistics is
    what living with your parents does to your eligibility as a romantic
    partner. A few years back, a reader who calls himself Rajni put
    his administrative career in higher education on hold to follow his
    successful girlfriend as her career took her around the country. They
    broke up, and he moved in with his parents for what he thought would
    be a few months until he landed a job. Then the recession landed,
    and now he is heading toward year three of living at home. He writes,
    "I never imagined I'd be unmarried at 37. When I hear the slurs we
    use for adults living at home, like 'man-child' or 'mama's boy,'
    they sting, even though I don't think they apply to me. Still, I know
    most women want an established man with a great career. Even if I'm
    emotionally mature with great life experiences, my unemployment makes
    me a work-in-progress. I used to think I was a catch; every passing
    month makes me less of one. Should I try to make my case on Match.com
    with brazen, unemployed honesty? With a profile picture that's got
    my folks in the background, holding a sign that says 'It's not as
    bad as it looks'?"

    Grandpa, His Lady Friend, and MeThe downturn has been particularly
    brutal for young people entering the job market. Those who went to
    graduate school knew they'd be taking on huge debt, but they saw it
    as in investment: Their degrees were supposed to allow them to choose
    among the most alluring jobs. Laura Sankey graduated from law school
    in 2009, but after a fruitless 18 months attempting to start her
    legal career, she is now looking for jobs unrelated to the law, and
    her hard-earned degree now feels like "$100K of gambling debt." She
    is being kept afloat by the fact that her grandfather has a big,
    mostly empty house. Her belongings are stacked in his garage, and
    she lives in his basement.

    "Most nights, he goes over to his lady friend's house for dinner and
    a movie or TV program-they both are big fans of Jon Stewart and The
    Office. I often get invited, and I usually tag along about one night
    a week," she writes. Grandpa pays for the utilities and keeps the
    kitchen stocked, and Sankey, a vegetarian, does her part by cooking
    him occasional dinners. "He's of a meat-and-potatoes generation,
    so when I cook for us both, his first impression is always, 'This
    looks ... interesting,' with a bit of a raised eyebrow. He's always
    game to eat what I make, though he's vetoed any tofu recipes."

    She feels indebted to her grandfather and despairs about how to get
    on with her life. "I hate that I turned 29 a couple weeks ago and I'm
    once again dependent on my family for my survival. I know that I'm
    lucky to have family to fall back on, and that there are plenty of
    people who are much worse off than I am. It's hard not to feel like
    I'm taking advantage, though, no matter how much my grandpa claims
    there's no problems with me being there."

    One of Sankey's biggest fears is that the rest of her relatives,
    struggling to keep a family business afloat, might also find themselves
    in need of her grandfather's largesse, "I'm crossing my fingers that
    my grandpa's house doesn't fill up with my parents, brother, aunts,
    uncles or cousins, since we're all just barely holding it together."

    "Any Plans for Dinner?"It's easy to understand the anguish of people
    who are forced to move back in with their family. But one letter
    from a middle-aged father who wishes to remain anonymous tells how
    draining this life-sustaining hospitality can be for the hosts. Two
    years ago, Mr. X's daughter and son-in-law moved into his house, where
    he and his wife work out of home offices. Even though the son-in-law
    has finally landed a job, long-term unemployment has left the young
    couple's finances in such shambles that they can't afford a deposit
    for an apartment of their own. So their elliptical trainer continues
    to dominate the family room, and their stuff spreads through the house.

    Mr. X writes, "My work day is punctuated with one or both of the young
    relatives appearing to ask, 'What are we doing for dinner?' which
    means, 'What are you providing for us today?' "

    He worries about how long it will be before the economy will be
    strong enough for his children to live on their own and pay off
    their student debt. And he contemplates what could be a great real
    estate idea for aging parents and their underemployed adult children:
    "Maybe the new fad will be the construction of 'children's apartments'
    in retirement homes."

    He adds, "Please say something on behalf of the millions of people
    who are doing this proudly, if not always completely happily, for
    their kids. And when those kids say, as Peggy Lee did, 'Is that all
    there is?' when they get their inheritance, hopefully it will come
    with a note reading, 'You spent it all in the Great Recession.'"

    Built-In BabysittersThree years ago, Autumn and her husband were newly
    discharged from the military and trying to figure out their transition
    to civilian life. So they took up her divorced mother-in-law's
    invitation to move into an existing multigenerational household. The
    mother-in-law lived in an apartment attached to her parents' house;
    the young couple was offered the upper floors of the home. Two children
    later, there are now four generations under one roof.

    "While I felt defensive at first, I no longer do when I explain why we
    live like this. It was refreshing to hear from a foreign coworker that
    living any other way would be abnormal in his culture," she writes.

    Yes, there have been adjustments. In deference to the sleeping habits
    of their older relatives, the young couple no longer hosts late night
    parties. Then there was the time she had to let out a sick dog in the
    middle of the night: "That was the same time Grandpa decided to walk
    to bathroom in his birthday suit because, hey, that's how he slept
    in his own house and why would anyone be up?" She says such living
    situations are not for controlling personality types, but adds:
    "With patience, humor, and extra bathrobes it can be a blessing."

    The blessings are charmingly quotidian: "Once in a while, the laundry
    fairy visits and my clothes have magically moved from the dryer and
    are folded in a basket at the bottom of the stairs." Most important
    is the relationship her children have with their grandmother and
    great-grandparents. "My 2-year-old enjoys going downstairs in the
    morning in her footie pajamas to sneak a piece of bacon from the early
    risers. They entertain her, or, more accurately, she entertains them
    until I've had a coffee fix." Autumn knows this arrangement is not
    permanent. But, she says, "This time is a gift that I wouldn't trade
    for any McMansion."

    A Friend IndeedHaving a single woman friend move in with a married
    couple is a premise well-suited to farce. But Leslie realized there was
    nothing farcical about the financial situation of a friend who lost
    her job 18 months ago. The friend qualified for a worker-retraining
    program, but there was no way she could afford both tuition and
    rent. Leslie and her husband had an empty guest room, so they offered
    her a place to stay rent-free while she completed her studies and
    looked for work.

    Before the move, Leslie and her husband worried that a strange power
    dynamic might develop with a friend who would be living on their
    largesse. Other questions also loomed: "Would we resent her presence?

    Would we feel like we couldn't make noise during sex? What if she met
    a guy we didn't like and started having him sleep over all the time?"

    Instead, Leslie has found, "We are simply all adults who try to be
    considerate of each other. We keep the common areas clean, have a
    Saturday morning brunch ritual which includes NPR's Wait, Wait ...

    Don't Tell Me!. We had a good time integrating her belongings with
    ours and rearranging the house so that it reflects all of us."

    Occasionally Leslie and her husband treat themselves to a hotel for
    some private time, and her friend's been too busy with school work
    to do much dating. Leslie says of the experience, "We've become more
    than friends-we've become a second family. I wouldn't change a thing."

    Our Ceramic Toothbrush HolderWhen people move in with friends or
    family, they must often say goodbye to their possessions, if only
    temporarily. The first night after Caitlin Seidler and her boyfriend
    moved into his parents' place, she tried to imagine all the belongings
    she had boxed up and put in storage: "Our ceramic toothbrush holder,
    our rubber spatula, our set of juice glasses with red roosters painted
    on them. I genuinely missed these things."

    Seidler and her boyfriend had two years of graduate school ahead of
    them and his parents had offered to host them so they could pay for
    their studies without going broke. It all made sense, but Seidler soon
    got tired of her fellow students' reaction to her living arrangements:
    "It was usually accompanied by a facial expression that indicated the
    person would rather dive into a pool of glass shards then find herself
    in my situation. And then there was the frequent follow-up question:
    'Do they let you sleep in the same room?' " (Yes.)

    The couple got engaged and later married, all the while still living
    with his parents. Over the years, Seidler came to appreciate the
    financial wisdom of their offer, realizing that she and her husband had
    saved about $40,000 in living expenses. Seidler and her husband are
    a success story. They completed their studies, both found good jobs
    in their field (education), and today they have their own place in
    another city. As they contemplate eventually having a family of their
    own, Seidler says her in-laws are "a model for the type of parents
    we'd like to be." Oh, and when Seidler finally reopened her boxes
    two years later, she realized, "Most of the items, I had forgotten
    about completely."

    Soviet StyleIn late 2007, Shannon Mitchell and her husband could no
    longer afford the rent on their apartment. Mitchell, who works in
    public relations, and her husband, who is a contractor, were expecting
    their first child. They moved in with Mitchell's grandmother-in-law,
    an Armenian emigre who had lived under Soviet rule and who ruled her
    house Soviet-style, too. "She owned a dishwasher, but used it to
    store her tinfoil and wax paper; owned an oven, but kept her pots
    and pans in it, preferring to use the stove top alone for cooking;
    and owned a dryer, but used a clothesline religiously. Consequently,
    hubby and I were not allowed to use these items, either. So I had to
    wash dishes and baby bottles by hand, learn to make food on a gas
    range, and ended up needing surgery on my knee after stepping in a
    hole in the lawn while hanging laundry," Mitchell writes.

    Grandmother also believed that artificially warming or cooling the
    house is bad for the body and definitely bad for the budget, so there
    was no air-conditioning in the summer and no heating in the winter.

    Fortunately, Grandmother no longer lived in Armenia but in southern
    California. Her frugality was extreme. "When clothing became too old
    to wear anymore, it was cut into squares and stored in the bathroom
    as toilet paper. When she goes walking she brings a bag along to
    collect bottles and cans for recycling."

    Mitchell and her family stayed for two years, but while they were hard
    years, she says she learned many valuable lessons. Grandmother had
    survived deprivation Mitchell could only imagine; she was a magnificent
    cook, and she allowed Mitchell to stand in the kitchen and be the first
    to write down the family's Armenian family recipes. "She taught me how
    to be a penny pincher, although you won't catch me looking through
    my neighbors' garbage. But I do now know where to shop for fresh,
    inexpensive fruit and veggies, how to get the most out of my local
    markets, and to not be afraid of the thrift stores. Her wisdom has
    rubbed off on me and made me a better person."

    A Do-Over "Rajni," the 37-year old who worries about finding both
    love and work, ended his letter with some thoughts on what it means
    to be living with his parents a second time around. "Who gets a
    do-over with his parents? After the first few months we figured out
    how not to drive each other absolutely crazy, and since then we've
    had these moments to reminisce and even share new experiences. I've
    done landscaping with Dad, helped babysit my niece, obsessed over
    the election with Mom. I'm surrounded by pictures of us together 10,
    20, 30 years ago. And here they are now, pushing 70. For the first
    time I see that not only will I not be young forever, I won't have
    them too much longer. I still desperately want to find new work,
    move out, and start a family with all I now know. But I wish every
    adult could spend a few months at midlife with his or her parents,
    just to love them, or settle things, or share a few last moments."




    From: A. Papazian
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