Jump to content

Menu

matrips

Members
  • Posts

    2,546
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by matrips

  1. Looking at it to help with general anxiety. Fully functioning kid appears on the outside. Struggles with anxiety inside. I think kid would be open to a supplement at this time, but nothing more doctorish. So just looking for a place to start. Would Tryptophan be a gentle supplement to help? What are the downsides? Advice on dosages or anything related to it is welcome.

  2. On 10/24/2023 at 9:32 PM, prairiewindmomma said:

    With housing prices as they are, many young people here either have multiple roommates or continue to live at home for a time.

    If you have adult working children still living at home, how have you sorted out the dynamics? We don’t have cultural expectations to fall back on for guidance. We need some sort of blanket guidelines…given the different personalities of our children.

    Not there yet since mine are still in college, but I think there should be a discussion and consensus on the goal of living at home. Is it so they just have more spending money to go out and play, or is it to save for the future? What is their savings goal?  I think I’d only be okay with the prepping for the future part. Figuring out much would it cost them to not live at home, and then get used to paying (saving) almost that and learning to live on the remainder. 

    • Like 2
  3. We all have the backpack style suitcases from Hynes Eagle. Love them! We have the larger 42-44L type ones. The dimensions qualify for carryons in the US and Europe.  So much better than losing luggage! That’s all we bring on trips anymore. We also have and use packing cubes- they’re amazing.

  4. 14 minutes ago, Melanie32 said:

    Wow! My daughter’s chosen university is less than $10K a year before any grants! That’s with commuting. Her estimated cost is around 7K.

    Do you live in Florida? That pricing sounds like our universities, and yes we have a great deal! Especially when kids can often earn merit scholarships from the state that will then pay all of it!  Or scholarships from the school on top of that and then get refunds. 

    • Like 1
  5. 11 hours ago, cintinative said:

    I have heard a lot of "private schools' tuition are similar to public u's after all the scholarships and discounts" stuff. 

    What I’ve realized being on various boards, is that many of those commenters typically have a budget of $35,000 or under for a year of college. So in those cases, yes- quite a few private schools will come in similar to those amounts with scholarships and aid, and be comparable to their public flagship option.  My dd’s friend got about $55,000 in aid from an $80k private school. $25k is a good deal for some folks- it is very comparable to tuition, room and board at many public universities, and in some states, less.

    but when your budget is really low and you’re looking at your public option as being CC or commuting, then no- private schools probably won’t come close at all.

    Theres a huge range of what people find affordable. Many seem resigned to $25k/year as being the bare minimum/low end of what they’ll have to pay. That’s not my version of low budget, but I think that’s where the conversation gets skewed. We were looking for way cheaper than that! Lol.

    • Like 5
    • Thanks 3
  6. Oops- I think you meant the application process.  Sorry, but the same probably applies. 
     

    A little of both. Mine are going to a huge state school, so things aren’t very forgiving if they fall through the cracks. I help them stay on top of it because the sheer volume of stuff to do, forms to complete, and websites to look at is overwhelming. I know about things to watch for from reading parent pages and such; I don’t know how kids are supposed to wrap their heads around it all.  Gradually yes, but not to know it all as incoming freshman.  I couldn’t tell them ‘you’re on your own’ and ignore what I know and they don’t. I look at it as a teaching process.  

    • Like 1
  7. 4 hours ago, DawnM said:

    I agree with those of you who say if it guaranteed a higher and faster sale, do it!   The issue is, I don't know if it does.

    However, DH and I discussed next steps last night and we are going to start putting a lot of furniture in storage today and tomorrow and then she will come out Sat or Sun to tell us what she thinks is still necessary and we can decide.   I will look for some items on marketplace in the meantime.

    It depends on the market of course, but we staged and had multiple offers the first weekend.  It went well above what we priced it for.  
    One realtor we interviewed (and didn’t go with), didn’t think it would sell for near as much because it wasn’t an upscale type home.  The staging really helped elevate the look imo.

    • Like 1
  8. Wish I had an Apple Pencil, but these photos are what I was saying aboveIMG_6770.thumb.png.fe890b15404c0b5d1fcdb210b31ea1e2.pngIMG_6771.thumb.png.bb55a22d2ee41d6f61aa99c80a31d686.png. Sorry it’s sloppy. 
     

    and then of course, replacing the soffit and cabinets on the sink side with cabinets that go to the ceiling.

     

    • Like 1
  9. I love doing practical! To keep it simple without removing walls etc- I would move the fridge to replace the metal shelf unit by the doorway with the brick/stone flooring. Then add base cabinets, countertops, and top cabinets to the ceiling - to the right of the fridge and wrapping around in an L shape until you get to the dining room doorway.  This will give you a decent stretch of countertop, even if it is L shaped. You would close up that doorway by the broom and step stool. Also put a cabinet to the ceiling over the fridge for a look of continuity.  It will also hold deep, large items.

    On the other side of the kitchen, I would get rid of the old fashioned soffit that hangs low, and install cabinets to the ceiling.

    This should be pretty inexpensive and easy since it’s not any major work. Mostly cabinets and countertops, and closing up a doorway.

    what is on the other walls of the little eating nook?  I see a couple windows and two corner builtins.  What’s on the walls we can’t see?  Any place to add a wall of cabinets to use for more pantry space or less used cookware?

  10. So it’s just those pieces of furniture and nothing else?  Or is that just the basis for everything else? I would ask for more details because that is not my experience with staging.

    Our stager actually reused most of our very old and not fancy furniture (we put a lot in storage as well), but she had new bathroom lights put in, a new vanity, new mirrors, wall decor, bedspreads, pillows, vases, shower curtain, towels, and more. and painted two of our rooms.  She rearranged all our furniture in a completely different way and the house looked amazing! I would have never picked such linens/decor but wow. It made our stuff look stunning, lol. She said leave the kids rooms as is because they don’t matter so much.  The living room, family room, kitchen, and master bedroom/bath was what she focused on.

    Btw, she owned all the linens, decor etc.  It was loaned to us for the staging, but then taken back to use again.

    • Like 3
×
×
  • Create New...