I’m 25 and still live with my parents.
And I don’t mind. I mean, they wake up and five in the morning and turn on the generator in the garage to make sure it still works, but it’s hell of a lot cheaper to live at home.
Rent is $500 a month. If I wanted to pay rent for that cheap, I’d have to live a good hour away from Washington, D.C., the commute twice or even three times as long during traffic hour. I have a fear that if I drive that far into the city, I’ll die. In traffic. I read an article from The Week about millenials living at home past 20, and how spoiled and rotten they are for staying. Everything done for them, meals cooked, laundry cleaned, room vaccumed. The millenials I know are working eight and a half hours a day, eating their lunch at their desks, and getting carpal tunnel.
What the article doesn’t bother to think about is context. Right now, there are too many college graduates for the number of jobs in cities. Companies lowball us hard, assuming we’ll work for $35,000 a year before taxes. Anyone who has a job knows that $35k is nothing if you live near a city. And as a neophyte in the art of negotiation, how much can you push this bar before they move on to someone else? You’ll need six to ten roommates and eat Top Ramen for breakfast, lunch and dinner to survive. If you don’t wanna live like that, you might as well stay home.
I’m saving up for a place of my own. My dream is a house in Bethesda, Maryland, but I’ll have to keep dreaming. Shit’s expensive, and unless I become a CEO overnight or start some shady dealings, it’s not in the cards. I know if I buy a decent place closer to D.C., the cost of my mortgage and condo fees will force me to get a roommate. Most of the people I know who still live with their folks say the same thing, “I’m saving up for a house.” I wonder when we’ll stop saying it and start attending open houses.
My parents assume I’ll be here until I get married. They ask me to read ads from Craigslist, to send emails to their lawyers. The past 20 years became so much easier with English-speaking children, but their knowledge of English has rapidly deteriorated. They’ve become lazy. Could you read this letter for me? I can’t read it, Mom regularly says. The TV’s broken, it’s not working. The computer is acting weird. I don’t know how to fix it.
But she does, and she won’t. She says sorry by over-feeding me.











