ChatterBank1 min ago
leaving home at 16?.
16 Answers
My 16 year old daughter has decided that she isnt happy about sticking to houserules and helping around the home ie washing up her dishes after shes eaten and has packed her case and although she has not given me a forwarding address shes moved either into her boyfriends home or a friends home Can she legally do this?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.While technically you could go to court etc. to get her to come home, most courts would not doing anything if person is 16 or over. Also she voluntarily left - they are more concerned with children who have had to leave due to a bad home situation.
See CAB link below..
http://www.adviceguide.org.uk/index/family_par ent/housing/young_people_and_housing.htm#Leavi nghomevoluntarily
See CAB link below..
http://www.adviceguide.org.uk/index/family_par ent/housing/young_people_and_housing.htm#Leavi nghomevoluntarily
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Sammi, it is always difficult when the realization that your children are growing up and really difficult when they are making mistakes, but unfortunately we have to allow them to do whatever it is they do and then suffer the consquences of their actions....its all part of growing into adults...the best advise as previous message, make sure u keep the ocmmunication lines open and dont condemn. She will one day realise mum knows best, even if she doesnt say it to you.. lots of luck x
looking back i myself was a bit like your daughter, at that age i thought i knew everything and wanted to move in with my boyfriend, nothing was going to stop me. Anyway i did, much to the dismay of my parents and i didnt contact, let them know where i was living or anything, it must of been awful for them! Well i found out the grass isint always greener on the other side and we struggled with rent, food and all other household costs, in the end we were evicted from our flat. The point im trying to get across is that your daughter will see this too a more than likely come crawling back with her tail between her legs, if shes staying with friends at the moment at some point they will get sick of her and ask her to leave. Does she have any money coming in?
I should imagine that without any finances your daughter will very quickly come to her senses as nobody else is going to be prepared to keep funding her in these difficult financial times. If the boyfriend is funding her and also young, he'll probably soon discover that she's becoming a financial burden who is draining his beer and spending money. And once the reality of funding food shopping and doing washing and ironing catches up with her I suspect she'll quickly discover that the grass is not greener on the other side after all.. This is a hard lesson she needs to learn, and hopefully if she doesn't get herself pregant, it's better that she learns it for herself because personal experience, even if it's learnt the hard way, will always be a hundred times more meaningful than any lectures you can give her. Hard though it sounds, the reality of trying to manage on little or no money may be a hundred times more of an life-skills educational experience than any of her GCSEs could give her.
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