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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:
MyCatIsABiggerBastardThanYours · 20/01/2017 09:56

Blimey, that is not messy. A bit untidy, yes, but really not messy.

She's good at school you say and does lots of extra stuff outside of school. I really wouldn't worry about this.

gemdrop84 · 20/01/2017 09:56

Wow, that's great I think! 8yr old dd's room is worse than that, she just isn't tidy. You can't see the floor. I really wouldn't worry but I'd make sure she gives it a good clear out and clean, including hoovering, etc every fortnight. Maybe a bag to pop things in for charity if there's a lot of stuff?

Tissunnyupnorth · 20/01/2017 09:56

I have two teenagers. That is not a messy room. Choose your battles, though I don't even think you have the basis for one here!

FishInAWetSuitAndFlippers · 20/01/2017 09:56

I would be over the moon with that room. I haven't seen the carpet in my sons room for months Grin

formerbabe · 20/01/2017 09:57

You are being ridiculous. My own bedroom is messier than that right now Blush

LiveLifeWithPassion · 20/01/2017 09:57

I expect my dcs to tidy their room every night. They don't always but they can't have friends over if their room is a tip.

Does she have a place for everything?

I often give specific instructions to help them manage

  • dirty clothes in laundry bin
  • all other clothes in wardrobe or on the hook
  • books back on the shelf etc etc
IT seems to work better than 'tidy your room!'
Patriciathestripper1 · 20/01/2017 09:57

Shock Messy? I'd pay her to make my room look like that.
Jayzus if you call that messy your standards are way too high and I feel sorry for your Dd

Bluntness100 · 20/01/2017 09:58

I'm also not seeing the issue here, looks tidy enough to me. Kids are messy, fact, and yours seems quite tidy actually.

HateSummer · 20/01/2017 09:58

Why are you posting pics of your dd's dirty pants on the floor? Confused

My dd has the same duvet cover.

Soubriquet · 20/01/2017 09:59

That's fine!

You see carpet, room is fine

My sister used to have a floordrobe at least a foot deep. Now that was messy

80sMum · 20/01/2017 10:01

Goodness, OP! If my DD had kept her room as good as that when she was 12, I would have been delighted! It's not perfect, I know, but it will do, surely?

Thingvellir · 20/01/2017 10:02

I was expecting it to be a lot worse before clicking on the thread Wink

I am trying to train my almost 9 year old currently to tidy up her desk (which is covered in crap) once a week. She has to do it to get her pocket money

TheCaptainsMum · 20/01/2017 10:02

Is this a stealth boast? That's not messy.

itsmine · 20/01/2017 10:03

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

MrsPMT · 20/01/2017 10:03

That's tidier than my room Grin
Soubriquet are you my sister? (suspicious)
Actually just remembered it was a 'chairdrobe' I had Blush shared a room with a very tidy sister and drove her nuts with my mess

MsGameandWatch · 20/01/2017 10:03

I don't think you should putting photos of your child's private living space on the internet in the hope of getting a bunch of strangers to slag her living habits off,

ClopySow · 20/01/2017 10:04

Mate, if my kids room looked like that i'd be ecstatic.

isupposeitsverynice · 20/01/2017 10:04

Well, I guess I'd better get off mumsnet and tidy up, because your daughters room is significantly tidier than mine is right now Grin

MsGameandWatch · 20/01/2017 10:05

Maybe you'll publish pages from her diary next?

gleam · 20/01/2017 10:05

Ha ha ha! That's untidy!

IHeartKingThistle · 20/01/2017 10:05

I have more of an issue with a parent who thinks it's OK to put pictures of their daughter's room on the Internet. You've crossed a line there IMO.

OhMrBadger · 20/01/2017 10:06

I can't walk into my boys' room without doing the Shit Shit Shit Feckin' Lego Embedded In Foot dance, so I'd swap for dirty pants any day!

nokidshere · 20/01/2017 10:07

I never go in my sons rooms unless the specifically ask me to. I never remind them about washing, tidying and clearing - if they want to go to school in dirty smelly clothes and live in a pigsty that's up to them too as long as it doesn't encroach on any other space in the house. I've been doing this since they were 10&12.

LTBforGin · 20/01/2017 10:07

That wouldn't bother me much at all. I would straighten the bed up, washing in wash basket, rubbish in bin if it really niggled me but that's a 2 minute job.

Foureyesarebetterthantwo · 20/01/2017 10:08

I think it's fine to say 'can you put your dirty clothes in the bin' and insist on that. That's what I need out of the situation.

I'd like my dd's room to be tidy and nice and so would she but it's a big effort and it's about as tidy as this room, so ok but not sparkling.

It is not a huge problem though, and your description of her is as a lovely hard-working girl who responds when you ask her to do stuff, so I don't think you need to do anything more.