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Giving SD the smallest room - does this sound fair?

HogwartsIsHome's picture

We're currently in the process of buying a 4 bedroom house. There's me, SO and then his daughter is with us every other weekend Friday evening to Sunday evening. The reason we're buying a 4 bed house is it was dirt cheap and also we don't want to move in the next 10 years so it gives us room to expand our family.

Our original plan was the put SD in the smallest room. We have the big room with the en suite and then we'll have two spare rooms for now until we have a baby.

I'm unsure how I feel about putting her in the smallest room. On the one hand I feel there'll be two slightly bigger rooms left empty the vast majority of the time. We do use the spare room quite a bit as a chill out room so I guess there'll be one spare room empty all of the time. But on the other hand, she's only here 4 nights a month. When we have a baby we don't then want to turf her out of her bigger room so the baby can have it as I think that would make her feel pushed out.

Does it sound reasonable to give her the smallest room? It's still bigger than the room she currently has. If custody arrangements changed in the future and we ended up having her more then we would look to reassess the situation.

Comments

justmakingthebest's picture

What are the plans in the next few months with the other rooms? If you are going to make one an office and the other a guest room for now AND have furniture in them, I wouldn't think anything of it. However, if you are going to literally have empty rooms and are just putting her in the smallest room for when you have more children one day... it seems a little mean to me.

HogwartsIsHome's picture

The plan is to have one as an office as we both frequently work from home and the other as a spare room. We already have the furniture for both room - they're crammed into our current spare bedroom in our old house which incidentally is the biggest bedroom currently.

Aunt Agatha's picture

How old is your SD? If she’ll be aging out in the next 3-5 years, i would lean toward a bigger room. If she’s still young and you have plans as mentioned above, then I would think the smaller room is fine.

HogwartsIsHome's picture

She's 6

ESMOD's picture

If she's 6, the size will matter less than the contents. Make it super cute... let her help pick the paint/colors or do it up in a style you know she will love. I guarantee she will be more stoked to walk into a purple room with a cool Teepee and toy trunk than going into a larger "generic" room. She's 6 and won't likely whip out a tape measure

mommadukes2015's picture

^^^^^^this. I personally love small rooms/small houses. You can make it super cute and the size won't matter much. If she was 12 I can see her mounting an argument, but at 6 I think she'll just be happy with a cute room.

mommadukes2015's picture

^^^^^^this. I personally love small rooms/small houses. You can make it super cute and the size won't matter much. If she was 12 I can see her mounting an argument, but at 6 I think she'll just be happy with a cute room.

HogwartsIsHome's picture

That makes a lot of sense ESMOD. She has already picked out which colours she wants although we haven't yet gone carpet shopping.

AshMar654's picture

Use the smallest room as the spare room. Honestly what is wrong with giving her and future kid a big room. Who knows as she gets older maybe she will want to spend more time there. How old is she?

HogwartsIsHome's picture

She's 6 and we want more than one child so in a few years there won't be a spare room.

Also our spare bed is a double bed whereas her bed is a single so hers takes up way less space.

twoviewpoints's picture

I think the smaller room will be fine. If you start this out as you intend to continue she'll settle in ok. Let her select the paint from a handful of possible samples you're good with and make a big thing of getting it ready and welcoming.

Even in a smaller room she'll have space to grow with shelves on wall and maybe a daybed to start (I liked daybed for my girls as I could slide totes under the bed skirt with toys, colors and color books, play-dough and whatnot... different color totes for each playtime activity). As your SD ages you can go with a loft bed with a desk for laptop/homework and such. My girls liked to do their beds up all girly girl during the day with fun pillows and stuffed animals and my youngest daughter had string lights (pink) around the Priscilla curtains.

Unless Dad and/or you make a big deal over the small room being smaller than the two remaining other rooms, she may not give it much thought. Right now no one else is in those rooms she'd feel she was competing with. As new babies arrive, baby stuff takes up room (no one wants baby supplies scattered all over) so a larger room is needed along with a rocker for Mom. Natural for all the baby 'junk' to go in the other rooms.

Important thing is to make the room her space from the get go. Unless you're talking shoebox size room compared to the other two rooms, she should do fine. She'll have the furniture but she won't have as much daily 'stuff' someone living there 30 days a month would.

I'm big on each child having a "their space", where their things are kept and they can snuggle up comfy and read and tuck away their little treasures. I know growing up I had a GF who had a sister and three brothers. The kids had a grand total of two bedrooms. Two beds in one for the girls, the beds in one for the boys. But each kid has a 'their space and their things'... it was somethimes like 'hey, that's my space, get back on your side'. But it worked for them all. The parents in that home had the small bedroom. Lol.

HogwartsIsHome's picture

Thanks. We've no intention of making it into a big deal. Just a simple, this will be your room, how would you like to decorate it.

Her room is definitely bigger than shoebox size. She'll easy fit her bed, wardrobe, chest of drawers, bookcase and toy box in there with plenty of floor space to play.

Your friends house sounds like it was very cosy! Tbh the only reason we're having the biggest room is because it has the en suite and a walk on wardrobe.

ProbablyAlreadyInsane's picture

It's your choice Smile Depending on how you want to use the rooms!

I get she's not there too often, my only concern would be making her feel like she's less welcome if you're just keeping an empty spare room vs. letting her have it. Might make her feel a little bit side-stepped or something.

I also understand wanting the extra space though since hers is likely to lay totally untouched for a majority of the month!

How old is SD? That could be a deciding factor. If she's still younger then I don't see any issue whatsoever with the smaller room, especially since you're planning on doing a reassessment if she starts living with you more! As stated above though, if she's semi-close to aging out, you may not have a use for both rooms before she does, so it might make sense to give her the larger room for the little bit she'll still be coming consistently.

HogwartsIsHome's picture

She's 6 and as above we have plans for both rooms - one an office and one a spare bedroom for guests.

hereiam's picture

The small room is fine. Like you said, it's bigger than what she has now, and you are using the other rooms, they won't be just sitting empty.

ProbablyAlreadyInsane's picture

Works for me Smile

A six year old is tiny and really doesn't need much space tbh... People just think they do. I'm glad your Dh is looking at all this so level-headed too! I know a lot of the ones on here would throw a fit if their kid didn't get the biggest and best room!

(also I love your username... FYI)

HogwartsIsHome's picture

Ahh thanks Biggrin SO thinks I'm a bit harry potter mad for my age Blum 3

I'm very glad he's so level headed too!

ProbablyAlreadyInsane's picture

I'm Harry Potter mad for my age too... I don't see it as an issue! Biggrin

Keep us updated!!!

WalkOnBy's picture

If you were making this decision as an intact family of origin, it wouldn't matter at all, right?

Your house - your decision.

hereiam's picture

Agreed.

Every decision does not have to be analyzed to death because it's a step situation. Do what is best for you and your family, in your own home.

HogwartsIsHome's picture

That's a really good point. If she was mine if would just be a case of this is what's happening, end of.

I think it's so easy to over analyse step situations, especially as whatever decision we make seems to be perceived as wrong by others and people are so judgey of step situations when they're not of nuclear family set ups.

Case in point was when SO and I went away without SD last year. We were massively judged for not taking SD on that one particular holiday (not to mention all the others we've taken her on) but a colleague frequently goes without her daughter and that's fine. Go figure... But anyway, I digress.

ESMOD's picture

My parents went on vacation without us all the time when we were young.

Once you have kids of your own, I would hope you would try to coordinate so she could come on those "family vacations" though.

HogwartsIsHome's picture

That's a really good point. If she was mine if would just be a case of this is what's happening, end of.

I think it's so easy to over analyse step situations, especially as whatever decision we make seems to be perceived as wrong by others and people are so judgey of step situations when they're not of nuclear family set ups.

Case in point was when SO and I went away without SD last year. We were massively judged for not taking SD on that one particular holiday (not to mention all the others we've taken her on) but a colleague frequently goes without her daughter and that's fine. Go figure... But anyway, I digress.

WalkOnBy's picture

try to ask yourself that question whenever you have to make a decision and you will start to understand that just because a child has parents who are divorced doesn't mean they need to be treated differently.

When my DH got custody of his three, and two of mine were still living at home, we had to sell my house and we rented a ginormous house for two years until the Things left for college. The house had 5 bedrooms.

BabyVoice got one bedroom.
ASS and KarateKid shared the largest bedroom.
DH and I had the master
Thing1 had the smallest bedroom in the house
Thing2 had a bigger bedroom than Thing1 and BabyVoice

Guess who decided all that? Me....did I give anyone input? Nope. Did I solicit anyone's opinions? Nope.

Kids don't pay the rent, they don't get to decide things like that.

DaizyDuke's picture

She's 6. Why would a 6 year old even notice or care that her room is slightly smaller... can't imagine the room is THAT much smaller? I agree with above, just make it cute, and tailored to her.

I agree with your thinking that it's better to put her in the room you want her in once your family expands, vs. putting her in bigger room and then shuffling her around because of new baby. I think THAT would make a kid feel bad.

HogwartsIsHome's picture

That we should put her in the smaller room. Before he mentioned it i just assumed he'd want to give her a bigger room. But when he brought it up and said why, I thought it made sense. But then I obviously don't have children so always find it hard to tell if what I think is reasonable.

Silent14's picture

It doesn’t matter which room you give her. She’s only there a few days a month. I wouldn’t imagine she even has that much stuff at your house since she’s not there often. My stepdaughters are teenagers now and the amount of stuff they have at our home has dwindled down to almost nothing. Even with both of them sharing a room, it’s still mostly empty. I wasted too much energy stressing over that kind of stuff when they were younger... turned out it really doesn’t matter.

hereiam's picture

whatever decision we make seems to be perceived as wrong by others and people are so judgey of step situations

Yep. I guess I was/am the worst step mother, ever. My SD was 5 (now, 26) when I started dating DH and I never made or questioned a decision based on whether I would be accused of hating SD because she wasn't mine. I never even thought about it, because her being my step did not influence my decisions. If other people thought that, well, I couldn't control that and never felt the need to constantly explain myself.

DaizyDuke's picture

Agree! who cares what Judge Judys think or say?? When we moved in our new home 6 years ago, BS was about 18 months old. He ended up with the biggest room in the house (besides the master)not because he was mine, not because of some slight I wanted to put on skids.. but because our house has 1 bedroom in basement, 2 on main floor and then 2 upstairs. Since our bedroom was upstairs, I wanted his to be directly across from ours so I could hear him and so he wasn't potentially going up and down stairs in the middle of the night. Of course skids argued about who was going to get the very slightly larger room on the main floor.. but whatever that was DH's business to handle. They rarely came anyway after all that, so glad we DIDN'T listen to whining and cave in to skid demands and MIL guilt trips.

But guess what? I didn't need to explain that to ANYONE.. skids, MIL NOBODY. I'm paying the freaking mortgage, I'll put people in rooms as I see fit.

Aniki-Moderator's picture

There are LOTS of ways to make a small room fun AND roomy. When I was a 8, my Dad built me a "loft" bed. The head of the bed was actually attached to a bookcase, so I had a floor-to-ceiling bookcase. I used the shelf right at bed-level to keep my radio-alarm-clock and books I was reading. The foot of the loft bed had a ladder up the end, but the one corner of the bed was built on top of a 5-drawer dresser. The bed was high enough, that I had a school desk under there, and all kinds of neat things. It was my Aladdin's cave, my hideout...any number of fun things.

Just because a room is small doesn't make it a bad thing. Smile

Thumper's picture

She should have the Master with master bath, I MEAN en suite. THAT is what HRNYC would say bahhhhhhh

Miss ya hrnyc, miss you bunches.

SMto2's picture

I've had this issue MULTIPLE times with both my bios and SKs. And in my experience, I think in order to be perceived as treating SKs fairly, you have to go over and above what you would for your bios. You can relegate your own bios to a smaller space, and no one will say anything, but if you do it with your SKs, you're treating them unfairly. It just IS that way, and it's one of the many downsides of step-life, IMHO.

For example, when DH and I bought our 1st house together, like you, we had no bios. He had SSs then 3 and 5, EOW, 4 nights a month at best (if they didn't have to skip due to some activity BM had them in that they COULD NOT miss.) The house had 4 BRS with a master bedroom, two small bedrooms side by side and a HUGE bedroom across the hall that happened to have really nice "sports" them border (wallpaper was big back then!) Since it was decorated for a boy, we gave it to SSs without a second thought, and they had a queen bed (their preference),window seat, dresser and still spacious floor space. When our first DS was born a couple years later, we had to give him one of the tiny bedrooms, which was filled to capacity with his crib, changing table, chest of drawers and toys. I was quite resentful over seeing that big beautiful room across the hall sit empty for the majority of the month, sometimes the whole month, but I dealt with it, knowing we could not re-locate SSs to a smaller bedroom without major fallout.

Fast forward 10 years. DH and I built 2 brand new houses 2 years apart. Both times, SSs had all but stopped coming, so we gave them a shared medium-sized room (twin beds by then.) By then, we had a 2nd DS bio. and both times, we gave the larger bedroom to our oldest DS over our youngest DS and thought nothing of it. In our last house, oldest DS even had a LARGE separate media room with leather movie theater seats as his "teen hangout room" that adjoined his bedroom and bathroom suite. Our youngest had the smallest bedroom in the house and no one said a word. When we bought our current house, this time, we gave youngest DS the larger bedroom which has a huge walk-in closet that doubles as a "play room" because we felt he needed more space. Our now teenage DS got a smaller bedroom. And neither of them really complained, and of course, no one ever commented on it like they would if one of our DSs was a SK. I wish I had advice, but I don't have any. I guess now that SKs are grown, I'm glad we can say we treated them the best we could, at times to the detriment of my and DH's bios. Again, I hate that it has to be that way, but it's reality.

secret's picture

SS has the smallest room in our house.

Only reason is, my son's room is in the basement... my girls share the bigger bedroom... we have the master... and ss is left with the smaller room.

It was never even a question for us. That's the way I arranged it when DH moved in. As in... I said... Here DH, I cleared out this room for SS.

Back when I only had 1 kid, there were 3 bedrooms in the house. The master, and a large room and a small room. My son got the small room, because we had a better use for the larger room at the time.

My son was 16 months old when my daughter was born, and the plan was to move my son in the larger room and my daughter into the smaller room, which was decorated as a generic nursery... but my aunt moved in and ended up living with me for 8 months... so SHE got the larger room and both kids were in the smaller room. It worked just fine. Because they were both under 2 there wasn't much "stuff", and I had a "play area" elsewhere in the house, I took out the closet doors - the crib fit perfectly in the closet, and the toddler bed and 2 small IKEA dressers still left plenty of room if needed.

After my aunt moved out, my son was moved into the larger room and my daughter stayed in the nursery.

When my 3rd was born, she stayed in our room for the first few months... then I split from their dad and got a new house.

In the new house, the 2 girls shared the larger room, and my son had the smaller room.

Whatever works for your family. If you have a better use for the larger rooms, then use them. It's YOUR home, not SD's.... as she gets older you might want to revisit, though, and/or when you expand your family... because as she gets older, she will need more space, and will likely be asking the type of questions about why a 6, 7, 10, 12 year old has the tiny room while the baby has the biggest one, kwim?