Dear Prudence,
We have a small, three-bedroom house. Our daughter, “Rose,” always had her own room with a private bath while her brothers shared. Rose wanted to move out at 19 to live with her sketchy, much older boyfriend. My wife and I were absolutely opposed, but Rose reminded us that she was a legal adult and she could do what she wanted. Rose moved out. My wife and I tried to keep the lines of communication open, but we did let one of the boys take over Rose’s old room.
Predictably, the relationship went south fairly quickly, and Rose wants to move home. The sticking point is that she wants her old room back. My wife just wants Rose home. She wants us to go back to the old living arrangement. I want Rose home too, but I don’t think it is right or fair to punish our sons by forcing them to give up their separate rooms, especially since one just started high school this fall. Neither of them wants to go back to bunk beds. And we have a sleeper sofa. My wife accused me of wanting to “punish” Rose for not listening to us, and I told her it wasn’t a punishment, just the natural consequences of her choices. We are at odds over this. What should we do?
— Rose’s Room