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© Penelope Lemov and Parenting Grown Children, 2025. Unauthorized use and/or duplication of this material without express and written permission from this site’s author and/or owner is strictly prohibited. Excerpts and links may be used, provided that full and clear credit is given.

© Penelope Lemov and Parenting Grown Children, 2025. Unauthorized use and/or duplication of this material without express and written permission from this site’s author and/or owner is strictly prohibited. Excerpts and links may be used, provided that full and clear credit is given.

Philipgalanes

I've always felt the genius behind Social Qs had our back–most of the time. Here Philip Galanes covers us again.

A dad writes about his three grown sons–ages 26 to 32. Every year he invites them to vacation with him and his wife, all expenses paid. They always accept, except this year, one of the sons declined. He made plans to go away with friends to pursue one of his hobbies. The dad understood. What he didn't understand was the son's complaint that the dad was not paying for the trip with his friends when he was covering the costs of his brothers' vacation. "Are we being unfair?" the dad wanted to know.

Galanes does not suggest that paying for an adult child's portion of a family vacation is somehow wrong, that it's or spoiling or infantizing a grown child. After all, if we can afford it, it's more of a self-indulgence than a child-indulgence. But let me let Galanes sum it up:

Spoiled brat at Departure Gate 39! Your son is an adult. …The implicit bargain of vacations like yours is that parents cover the costs of their adult children’s travel to facilitate more time together. It is not a voucher to parts unknown.

As to what the dad could possibly say to his son, Galanes offers this bit of tact:

We hope that you know the purpose of these trips is bringing us all together. We'd be delighted to pay for you, if you want to come along."

 

 

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4 responses to “Observation: Philip Galanes on covering the costs when our adult children vacation with us”

  1. Haralee Avatar

    No Kidding, it is family time! A friend offered her daughter who was struggling with college a trip when she graduated. Said daughter did graduate and asked that her boyfriend be paid so they could go together! It didn’t happen. Yes very spoiled.

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  2. Shari Avatar

    Absolutely! No way you should pay for an alternate trip.

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  3. penny Avatar

    Some of us get a lot of grief for paying for our adult children in the first place. That’s what I like about Galanes. He doesn’t take issue with that–if we can afford it, why not? right?–but the purpose of the trip is the key. A pleasure trip for themselves? They should take it when they can afford it.
    thanks for stopping by.

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  4. penny Avatar

    The sense of entitlement is sometimes breathtaking. Thanks for sharing the story about your friend’s daughter.

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