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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:
HellonHeels · 20/01/2017 10:55

Looks pretty much OK to me.

Does she actually have storage available for all the things you say are lying around (clothes, shoes, books)? If she doesn't, get her some storage and have a clear out of clothes if there's too much.

I'd want the desk clear so she can do homework maybe just concentrate on that and dirty clothes in laundry bin.

When is bin day? The day before just remind her it's bin day coming up and to empty her bin, pick up rubbish.

Is she being "messy" (by your standards) as a form of reacting to you being particularly hung up on perfect housekeeping?

Mrsbird311 · 20/01/2017 10:55

I think it's a bit messy, I wouldn't be too happy but I expect my kids to respect and look after the things I buy for them, I would get her to have a quick tidy up before bed, put dirty clothes in wash bin, rubbish in bin and put away clothes and stuff, once a week I would give it a good clean and hoover. Clothes, books and stuff is expensive and should be respected and looked after

CommunionHelp · 20/01/2017 10:55

Cross post with Ollie

formerbabe · 20/01/2017 10:56

There's about 3 or 4 things on the floor which need picking up Confused

Op... what's the rest of your house like? Are you super clean and tidy?

KatherinaMinola · 20/01/2017 10:56

You're crazy.

I wish the whole of my house was as messy as that.

Rowgtfc72 · 20/01/2017 10:56

You can see carpet. That's a bonus!

Scottishchick39 · 20/01/2017 10:57

I have a 15 year old daughter, that is a palace compared to her room. I refuse to go in but once a month I take her phone and ipad off her until it's clean and tidied to my standard, not hers.

SusanneLinder · 20/01/2017 10:57

That looks like my daughters room when she has "allegedly" cleaned it

megletthesecond · 20/01/2017 10:58

That isn't messy!

Maudlinmaud · 20/01/2017 10:58

NOT MESSY

MerryMarigold · 20/01/2017 11:01

But yes, I had a feeling that I need to let this go. It's managing that transition between little girl who I'd tidy up after and letting her manage her own life.

I think that's where your mistake has lain. She needed to do it WITH you for several years before being able to do it on her own. If you like things tidier then you should have taught her, not do it for her. I do it with my Dd who is 8 and she is always so satisified at the end. We are now getting to the stage where I can tell her to do it and she knows what to do (we still get dirty pants in between). I get her to do it so it looks immaculate once every 2 weeks and once a week it needs to be quite tidy.

Wishforsnow · 20/01/2017 11:01

It's not messy. Maybe you could buy her more storage if you are bothered. That is a very little wardrobe. I take it she can't put posters etc. on the wall as would be deemed messy. She should be enjoying herself not worrying about pointless housework.

tooclosetocall · 20/01/2017 11:09

YANBU, OP.
To me, yes it is messy. I don't mind if there are things that need to be tidied away on a surface (bookcase, table top, bed) but things on the floor? No.

I'm slowly realising I must be quite hard on my DC. I will try to loosen up a little but not so much to allow dirty clothes on the carpet

I live by the saying if you can put it down then you can put it away Wink

*I do have OCD tendencies.

BreconBeBuggered · 20/01/2017 11:09

That is not what I expected to see. Wait until she's a student. I remember being blown away to discover that DS1 had the tidiest room in his shared house, and it was about 5 million % messier than your DD's room. Look at all that floor! Okay, there are some bits that could do with picking up, but you're talking a 3-minute job, not wading through filth with multiple bin bags.

Mindtrope · 20/01/2017 11:13

What an invasion of your daughter's privacy OP.

CoughingForWeeks · 20/01/2017 11:14

You should have seen my lodger's room and he was 45!

Anononoo · 20/01/2017 11:16

not messy at all.

Talllara · 20/01/2017 11:16

Op I'm with you, I think your dds room is pretty messy! Perhaps we are both too ott?!

But, I've totally given up with my 8 year old and now I just tidy it for him. He's always very grateful so I've decided to just pick my battles.

SplendorSolis · 20/01/2017 11:17

Stealth boast about having an exceptionally tidy 12 yr?
OR are you an obsessive neat freak OP?

Please don't waste our time. That does not register above a 2 on any mess-measuring scale known to humankind.

Oh, and yes, you also lose points for invading your dc's privacy by posting pics of her room on the Internet.

MollyHopps · 20/01/2017 11:19

I.... just.....

Biscuit
TheFuckitBuckit · 20/01/2017 11:19

That's tidy by my 13 year olds standards, her room is seriously disgusting at its worst.
At the moment hers is reasonably tidy but not clutter free. As long as the floor is clear, there is no festering rubbish or manky dishes then I'll accept it as tidy

SpikeGilesSandwich · 20/01/2017 11:19

I think that's very tidy for a 12 year old, YABU if you think she should keep her own room like a show bedroom. Maybe you should have got some of those Real Doll kids instead if you can't handle a tiny bit of clutter.

Talllara · 20/01/2017 11:19

I'm really surprised at these responses. It's a lovely room but I'm just itching to tidy it up looking at those photos.

I'd make the bed, clear the cluttered shelves, pick up the mess off the floor.

Bushymuffmum · 20/01/2017 11:20

God, I really wish my ds17 loft room was "messy' like that!
I know exactly how u feel op but let me give you the solution: don't even bother going up there any more! For years I've spent about two hours a week cleaning it as its always so bad. No amount of nagging helps. One day I just cracked I was so fucking sick to death of the state of it - now I just leave him to it as I have a panic attack when I go in!
When all the crockery and glasses start to disappear I just give him a box and say bring everything down or il turn it he internet off!! But otherwise I just 'let it go' as the only person getting upset and worked up was me.

I'm now much happier since I just stopped going up to be honest and (hopefully) in September he'll be off to uni and my much tidier daughter can move up there! (After I've fumigated it)

GivenupSocialmediaNOTMN · 20/01/2017 11:20

Op your alternative is to give a her a days warning to tidy not herself or you will. Your house, your rules.