Your Hardest Family Question: My husband won’t ask his adult daughter to move out and be independent
FEATURES
- From Egypt to the Holy of Holies: The Seven-Fold Covenant Hidden in Exodus by Patrick D. Degn
- General Conference by the Numbers: When Conference and Holy Week Converge by Scott Brown
- More than Superficial Emotion: The Demanding Work of Real Love in Families by H. Wallace Goddard
- The Resurrection Was So Real, It Transformed Ordinary Men into Fearless Witnesses by Daniel C. Peterson
- The Solitary Savior: Finding Restoration in the Silence of Single Life by Jeff Teichert
- Lamb of God at the Met: A Night Where Music Was Testimony by Meridian Church Newswire
- How Can a Single Hebrew Letter Remind Us of Passover, New Life, and Salvation in Christ? by Steve Densley, Jr.
- Judas — The Necessary Shadow of the Atonement by Paul Bishop
- Escaping Our Tombs by Paul Bishop
- The April 2026 Edition of the World Report Notes Historic Growth in the Church by Meridian Church Newswire
















Comments | Return to Story
MikeOctober 27, 2018
I agree with the recommendation above. One additional perspective is thinking about this from the dependent daughter's perspective. She is probably not entirely happy being a perpetual juvenile but she doesn't have the life skills to make it yet. Helping her to grow even at this late day would be nice. But she cannot see you as the enemy nor as her mother. That might be very difficult. You don't know the deep future. This daughter might be the one taking care of you or your husband during the last and often most difficult chapter in your life.
ShareeOctober 26, 2018
Sounds to me like the father is an enabler. While I wouldn't recommend that he throw his daughter out on the street, he needs to work on getting her self-esteem up so she can live independently.
ADD A COMMENT