New York Post

MY MILLENNIAL WON’T LEAVE!

Most cases don’t end up in court, but tensions still arise as more adult children live at home on Mom and Dad’s dime

- By JANE RIDLEY Photo by TAMARA BECKWITH

WHEN Nicholas Papich graduated from high school, he decided to leave his mom’s house and move in with his dad.

Eleven years on — aside from a 12-month period when he worked as a model in Miami — the cozy arrangemen­t still stands. The 29-year-old lives rent-free with his father, Anton, and there are no signs he’ll soon find a place of his own.

“I feel like when he turns 30, I’m going to have to take a stand,” says Anton, 64, of Brooklyn. “Nick is clearly a late bloomer, but we have gotten to the point where he needs a push.”

According to the latest US census data, one-third of adults ages 18 to 34 live at home with their parents. Some 15 percent of 25- to 35-year-old millennial­s are in that category, compared to 10 percent of Generation Xers who hadn’t flown the nest by the same age back in 2000.

It’s a growing phenomenon that, when things go wrong, can lead to embarrassi­ng headlines. Last week, Mark and Christina Rotondo, of upstate Camillus, NY, got internatio­nal attention when they won the legal right to evict their layabout son, Michael, 30. He has lived in their home for the past eight years.

Evicting Nicholas is too drastic a measure for Anton, but his son’s constant presence has given him pause. The photograph­er recently collaborat­ed on a sardonic book: “Get a F - - king Job!,” which

pokes fun at the trend of lazy millennial­s outstaying their welcome at home.

“[Moving out] is the next logical step for Nick but it hasn’t happened,” says Anton. “I asked him outright, ‘What if I died? What would you do?’ And he just replied, ‘That’s ridiculous. You have the body of a 45-year-old.’ “He just doesn’t get it.” Meanwhile, Nicholas, a part-time criminolog­y student who works occasional shifts as an Uber driver, is quick to justify his living situation.

“It’s a different world than it used to be,” he says. “The problem is that the cost of living is constantly going up and earnings are going down. Most of my friends around this age group live with their parents. It’s just too expensive to afford rent.

“I understand why my dad is con- cerned — I’m almost 30 and I guess I should be on my own by now — but the reality is that everything costs too much.”

Nicholas’ lament is familiar to licensed marriage and family therapist Allen Wagner, who counsels individual­s in similar situations. The Los Angeles-based profession­al “sees this phenomenon a lot,” in which a kid’s failure to launch takes its toll on the entire household.

“Sadly, the parents are often partly to blame, because they’ve enabled their kid to become so entitled,” he says. “I call it ‘learned helplessne­ss,’ and it’s increasing­ly common.”

Although it’s fine to live with your parents temporaril­y while you lick your wounds over something like a divorce, sickness or job loss, it’s another thing when the months turn into years — or even decades.

“Some kids are totally reliant on their parents and don’t know how to become adults,” says Wagner. “My definition of a grown-up is an independen­t person who supports themselves. But these are people in their 20s, 30s and 40s who can’t afford rent, don’t feed themselves or [don’t] pay for their own health insurance.”

He believes tough-love measures such as kicking them out without notice are too cruel. Instead, the family needs to implement a multistage plan to wean the child and have them fly the nest.

“Parents can say: ‘We’re willing to give you six months, but after that, you are out.’ During those months, they can help motivate the child to find a job, quit wasting time watching TV or doing social media, and face the real challenges of adulthood.”

Pure economic necessity is the reason why both Lucky Fischer, 26, and Kristina Koller, 23, recently returned to their parents’ homes in Philadelph­ia and Yorktown Heights, NY, respective­ly.

Fischer, who works with the mentally handicappe­d, has been crashing on his mother’s couch since late 2017. He left an apartment he shared with roommates in order to save $300 a month in rent and put aside cash for his dream of moving permanentl­y to New York City and becoming a publicist.

“There’s not much privacy,” says Fischer, who lodges with his mom, Deborah Bell, 53, and sisters Syyana, 25, and 16-year-old Salimatu. “And my stuff is spread out all over the house.”

But his biggest headache is having to wait in line for the one bathroom he shares with three women.

“It’s a case of sucking it up, because I have a long-term goal in sight,” he says. “I know it will be worth it in the end.”

In an ideal world, he’ll remain at home for only the next six months. He will try to pay off at least some of his $34,000 student-loan debt, while saving for the deposit on a rental in New York for 2019.

Meanwhile, Koller, a jazz singer, sublet her shared $1,100-a-month apartment in Astoria four months ago and now lives rent-free with her parents, Steve, 57, and Laura, 60, in Westcheste­r. She had been feeling the pinch because she needs to pay her musicians no matter how many people show up to each gig.

She is now holed up in her old bedroom, which is still adorned with posters of her childhood heroes, including John Mayer and

 ??  ?? Nicholas Papich, 29, still lives with his father, Anton, who says, “I feel like when he turns 30, I’m going to have to take a stand.”
Nicholas Papich, 29, still lives with his father, Anton, who says, “I feel like when he turns 30, I’m going to have to take a stand.”
 ??  ?? Kristina Koller, 23, recently sublet her city apartment to live rent-free with parents Laura and Steve.
Kristina Koller, 23, recently sublet her city apartment to live rent-free with parents Laura and Steve.
 ??  ?? The Rotondo family made headlines after suing, and evicting, their 30-year-old son, Michael, last week.
The Rotondo family made headlines after suing, and evicting, their 30-year-old son, Michael, last week.

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