Daily Vitamina

Why Are More Adults Still Living At Home With Their Parents?

woman at home with mom

Did you know that about 32% of young adults (ages 18-34) still live with their parents? It might actually be a little higher for Latino adults since living at home with your parents or your parents living in your home has become the new norm.

LIKE DailyVitamina.com on Facebook! Get Your Daily Vitamin…FOR LIFE!

In 1960, 72% of American adults over the age of 18 were married and since then, those numbers have dropped in half.  Many are not getting married and they are not moving out, and parents are totally o.k. with that. It’s not that they can’t afford to move out; it’s just that they don’t want to because they get along with their parents great.

A 2013 poll asked the parents of 18-29 year olds and about three-quarters said their relationship with their children was good, while only 2% said it was bad. Plus, 86% of them said that they enjoy the company of their children, more than they do their spouse or partner!

What makes their relationships so strong? They see each other everyday or almost every day, which might be the key to stronger relationships between parents and grown children. When children move out, they may only come visit once in a while or on holidays. But when they live under the same roof, they look after each other and share interest in each other’s everyday lives, which makes a difference.

When we take a look at data from 20 or 30 years ago, in 1986 about half of parents report to have spoken with their grown child in the last week, in 1988 about less than half. Recent data shows that nearly 90% of parents give advice to their kids and they talk often.

Perhaps it’s the ease of communication through cell phones and social media or perhaps it’s that parents are more open to talking to their children about everyday things that are happening in their lives.

With Latino children, we see a lot of aging parents that going through difficult situations where they can’t afford the cost of living, so their grown children continue to live at home to help them financially. Many times when a parent becomes ill, they too prefer to move back in with their parents or invite them to their home so they won’t be sent to a nursing home where they will be lonely.

The good news is that the relationships between grown children and their parents are getting stronger. So what if grown children are living with their parents! At the end of the day, having strong relationships with the people you love is great for their health, which might be another reason why people living longer…

Hispanics Are Living Longer Than Blacks and Whites

 

Exit mobile version