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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

AIBU - daughter's messy room (with pics)

303 replies

mrsm43s · 20/01/2017 09:48

So my daughter is 12, and her room is always messy. It drives me bonkers, and I'm constantly biting my tongue about it!

So, at 12 what is reasonable? I generally just shut the door to her room and walk on past, because the mess bothers me. Consequently the floor is rarely hoovered and the room rarely cleaned. She also loses/damages (her own) possessions as a result of the mess (e.g. losing one glove, facewash spilt on a book, accidentally sits on and snaps ruler etc). When this happens she either goes without, or replaces items with her own money.

She's not allowed food or drink in her room (apart from water bottle) because of the mess.

Her floor is generally clear in the middle, but mess and clutter round the edges of the room and on every surface, bed rarely made, and often has stuff (books, clothes etc) in it. She'll empty the bin or go and get washing when prompted and will strip and change the bed when asked. She'll shuffle round and tidy up a bit if pressed, but honestly not to what I would consider an acceptable standard.

Her room is a good size 13'x11' although the clutter makes it look small. Her brother is in the 6' x 6' box room by luck of birth order. His room is cluttered, but kept tidier than his sister's.

She's a great girl, polite, well behaved, achieving highly at school. She's busy with lots of extra curriculars and puts loads of effort into her school work. Do I let this slide? Is this level of mess acceptable for a 12 year old? I appreciate it could be far worse!

AIBU - daughter's messy room (with pics)
AIBU - daughter's messy room (with pics)
OP posts:
Pumpkintopf · 21/01/2017 00:45

Why not go in there and do it with her, show her what an acceptable standard looks like then explain she needs to keep to it.

LassWiTheDelicateAir · 21/01/2017 00:48

It's far tidier than my bedroom. It's not messy at all. Awful thread to start.

PickAChew · 21/01/2017 00:52

Take her a hot chocolate and direct her and that'll be spotless in 20 minutes!

YouHadMeAtCake · 21/01/2017 01:08

As PP have said, that is NOT messy! My goodness, you've not seen messy children's bedrooms if you think that qualifies Grin

Italiangreyhound · 21/01/2017 01:19

Wow, that looks like my 12 year old daughter's room AFTER she has tidied it.

We now just encourage her to do it, when we can, and don't battle over it. There are soooooooo many much worse things we could be battling over.

She's a great girl, polite, well behaved, achieving highly at school. She's busy with lots of extra curriculars and puts loads of effort into her school work. make sure you tell her how great she is, won't you.

DeadMorose · 21/01/2017 02:16

I'm not a neat freak, but I do find it messy. I'm also a bit Hmm at the fact that I seem to be one of the very few on here who actually tells her DC to tidy up.

My DS is 11, his room is tiny, so any clutter is very visible. We have a rule that he must tidy up (to our standard) and hoover the room every week. Usually it falls on Sunday.
He also never leaves his pants lying around, they go straight to the washing basket.
If his room looked like that, I'd be telling him "no Playstation until it's tidied".

Maybe you could get her her own washing basket, so it would sit in her room? That would most likely prevent the dirty underwear on the floor.
And perhaps little baskets for makeup or creams and lotions?

Bumbleclat · 21/01/2017 03:31

That is NOT messy at all, my room was just left for me to wallow in from a young age and it is lovely when i gained the maturity to appreciate a)how to try it and the b)the joy of a tidy space. It's a lesson children have to learn on their own. Just shut her door so you don't have to look at it and in 10 a few years she'll be making it nice herself.
PS that's really not messy!

Peanutandphoenix · 21/01/2017 03:48

Are you joking op that's not messy at all I was expecting a bedroom like mine at that age you couldn't see my floor for the mess it got to the stage where I actually forgot what my carpet looked like that's clean compared to most teenagers bedrooms. If it makes you feel any better as soon as I moved out I turned in to my mum and became an obsessive neat freak. Op I think you need to chill your hormones and let this "messy" bedroom slide.

MontePulciana · 21/01/2017 04:03

Christ. Does she know you've put her bedroom photos in public domain?

Supermagicsmile · 21/01/2017 04:16

That is not messy!!!! Shock

Liiinoo · 21/01/2017 04:31

She is freakishly neat. Where are the empty crisp packets and sticky juice cups?

I found with DDs that encouraging them to invite a friend over for a sleepover/movie night generally provoked a room tidying frenzy. They are grown up now and their rooms are much tidier than mine! They even make their beds every day, a knack I still don't have as I reach pensionable age.

TheMysteriousJackelope · 21/01/2017 04:36

It isn't messy for a 12 year old keeping her own room clean.

There is 'adult tidy' and 'child tidy'. It takes them a while to understand what constitutes tidy and you need to help her until she gets it, not post photos of her room on the internet so you can go back and tell her 300 strangers think she's a slob. If someone did that to me, I'd be livid.

Alter · 21/01/2017 17:23

Yes it drives me mad too 14 yr old ds and 13 yr old dd. Have to stop myself going in and tidying, looks much worse than your pics though. It's very difficult but if you leave it long enough they will get their own sort of system.

Invictus72 · 21/01/2017 17:31

Nothing wrong with her room.
Take a chill-Pill lol

Wonderland88 · 21/01/2017 17:32

Honestly tidier than pictures I could put up of my room now. She's not hurting anyone and she sounds great. If she's happy then I say leave her to it.
My mum would have been delighted with me if I ever had my room this tidy!

fourkids · 21/01/2017 17:58

I'm afraid I also think it's a bit of an invasion of he privacy to put pictures of her room, personal possessions, pants, etc on the internet for people to comment on.

As for the 'mess', 1) I can see loads of carpet, and 2) where is the clothes mountain?!

IMO this should be removed. It's one thing airing one's own dirty washing in public but quite anther when it's someone else's.

Plus it's completely identifying. I'm not into spending my time searching for other posts, but lets hope that OP hasn't got any past posts about anything she doesn't want DD or DD's friends or their parents, for example to know about...

languagelearner · 21/01/2017 18:00

Better than my room when I was twelve. I had Lego all over the floor, usually.

languagelearner · 21/01/2017 18:03

Why don't buy her one of these boxes. I read a suggestion on a web board, where a mum used it in the living room for clearing up spread-around toys, a quick tidying up when you don't have time for a thorough sorting of all the toys. Later, when it's filling up, you go through it and sort it properly. Or your daughter, in your case.
www.ikea.com/gb/en/products/small-storage-organisers/storage-boxes-baskets/dr%C3%B6na-box-blue-art-10244899/

fourkids · 21/01/2017 18:06

The more I think about it, the more I hope the OP's DD doesn't end up with pictures of her dirty pants all over FB because someone has said to their own DD, 'isn't that your friend's bedroom on MN?'

languagelearner · 21/01/2017 18:07

Also, isn't there awfully little storage space in her room? I sense one of these might be missing, in the corner, right where the music stand is now. www.ikea.com/gb/en/products/storage-furniture/chest-of-drawers/malm-chest-of-3-drawers-white-art-70303386/
Hard to clear up if things can't be fitted into drawers...

languagelearner · 21/01/2017 18:09

Good point fourkids, the mum ought to withdraw the message, and not let it hang out here forever.

WatchingFromTheWings · 21/01/2017 18:09

My 14yo DD's room looks like that after she has tidied it! She's getting better....it was knee deep when she was 12.

Postchildrenpregranny · 21/01/2017 18:13

Havent rft but
Focus on the things that matter -not, getting pregnant too young .Not doing drugs, alcohol .Not smoking. Being polite .Working hard
I took photos of DD1 room when she went to Uni so I could look at them when I missed her. She's now 31,has her own place has decluttered and is quite neat (though not as neat as me)
I still despair of DD2 at 27 though

lelapaletute · 21/01/2017 18:15

As long as she doesn't expect you to clean her room; as long as the way she leaves it doesn't provoke mould or pests, or smells that escape into the rest of the house; and as long as she is tidy and neat throughout the rest of the house - leave it. Not your room, not your problem. If she wants it clean, she'll clean it. She sounds like an otherwise lovely, slightly messy kid. No problem to you at all.

NoMoreAngstPls · 21/01/2017 18:15

My 10yo DDs room is much worse. I've just been in there to demand she picks up the snotty tissues scattered across the room. Gross. She's a nightmare tiny bits of ripped up paper, broken hair bands everywhere. I'm quite tidy (she clearly takes after DH the hoarder, as she gets exactly the same panic about throwing ANYTHING away just in case she may need it some day).

DS is a clean freak, and and expert tidied, thank God!