**My Son Wants to Move In With His Girlfriend at 16, and My Spouse Supports It**
When my son first told me he wanted to move in with his girlfriend, I laughed. I thought it was a teenage fantasy, something that would pass in a week or two. But he looked me dead in the eye and said, “I’m serious. I love her. We want to be together.”
He’s sixteen. He still leaves his wet towels on the floor and forgets to do his homework. And now he thinks he’s ready to play house?
I expected my spouse to back me up, to remind him that sixteen is too young, that he still has school, responsibilities, a family. But instead, my spouse said, “Maybe we should support him. We don’t want to push him away.”
I couldn’t believe what I was hearing. “Support him? He’s a child. He doesn’t even have a job.”
“He’s growing up,” my spouse argued. “Would you rather he sneaks around behind our backs? At least this way, he’s honest.”
Honest or not, I felt like the ground was being ripped out from under me. I’m the bad guy now—the one saying no, while my spouse plays the “cool parent.”
The breaking point came last night. We were sitting at the dinner table, and my son said, “So, when can I move my stuff into her place?” He was grinning, confident, because he knew he had his other parent’s blessing.
I slammed my fork down. “You’re not moving in with anyone. You’re sixteen. You’re still a kid, and you’re staying home until you’re ready for the real world.”
My son’s face twisted in anger. “You’re ruining my life! Dad gets it, but you don’t.”
Then he stormed off, and my spouse just sat there, glaring at me. “Why do you always have to be so controlling? Don’t you remember what it felt like to be young?”
I felt the words burn in my chest. “Yes, I do. And I also remember how many mistakes I made because nobody stopped me. I’m not letting him throw his future away because you want to be the ‘understanding’ parent.”
That night, I lay awake, realizing something painful: it wasn’t just me against my son anymore. It was me against my whole family.
This morning, I made my choice. I told both of them, “If you want to play house and let him pretend he’s grown, fine. But I won’t watch it happen under my roof.”
I packed a bag and left for my sister’s. Not because I don’t love my son, but because I refuse to stand by while my spouse encourages him to throw away his childhood.
Because here’s the truth: sometimes being a parent means being the villain. And if that costs me their love right now, so be it. I’d rather lose their approval than watch my son lose his future.