Your Employee and Family Assistance Program is a support service that can help you take the first step toward change.
 

Are you supporting or enabling your adult children?

Once upon a time, not too long ago, the age of 18 marked the entry into adulthood. It was the age when many young people left high school and entered the workforce. They were old enough to serve in the military and in some countries, vote and legally consume alcohol. By their 20s, our parents and grandparents were usually living independently, making their own decisions and mistakes, earning an income, entering committed relationships and having children of their own.

This is no longer the case. In 2014, a U.S. study found that for the first time in more than 130 years, adults aged 18 to 34 were more likely to be living in their parents’ home than they were to be living in their own households. This trend continues. More recent research shows that today’s 20-somethings have made fewer transitions to adulthood than their parents and grandparents did at the same age.

What’s happened? It’s not just a different economy with fewer opportunities and more contract work, high student debt or soaring rents and housing prices that’s causing this generational shift. It’s also not that young people don’t move out, they do. They just seem to bounce right back home again. It’s because there’s been a shift in thinking by parents.

The new normal

It’s no longer a stigma for young adults to live at home or have their parents support them. In fact, it can be a sound financial decision to help pay down student debt or save for a home. However, it can also be emotionally and financially damaging if parents are dipping into their retirement savings or grown children are refusing to accept adult responsibilities. Parents walk a fine line between setting their children on the path to success and interfering with their growth by becoming enablers.  

How do parents know if they’ve crossed that line and become enablers? Here are some signs:

Supporting without enabling

All parents want their children to be happy and successful. Sometimes it makes financial sense for an adult child to temporarily live at home and sometimes crises occur that cause families to come together – a romantic breakup, job loss or health issues. Here are ways you can support your adult children while maintaining balance and encouraging independence:

If you or your adult children need financial advice or resources, or require coaching or counselling, contact your Employee and Family Assistance Program.

© 2024 LifeWorks (Canada) Ltd. Your program may not include all services described on this website, please refer to your benefit material for more information. For immediate assistance, call 1.844.880.9137.