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David Byers

ByDavid Byers, David Byers

Opinion

The truth about our family values

We ought to take better care of our parents and stop carting them off to impersonal, impossibly cash-strapped care homes to live out their days, writes David Byers

March 6, 2017 13:12
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2 min read

When I left home to go to university in 1997, my little brother waited patiently for a few months and then moved all of his things into my bedroom. After all, he correctly reasoned, I wasn’t coming back, and his old room was much too small for his decks. I didn’t mind, though. Leaving the family nest at 19 was what people did at that time.

Not any more. In a development that will make overprotective Jewish mothers beam inside, most students today expect to return home when they finish university — and we’re even building little houses in our back gardens for them. As ever, we journalists have even thought of a new word for this social phenomenon. We’re building “graddy annexes” for our graduates, apparently.

Graddy annexe experts (yes, they already exist) tell me there has been a 20 per cent rise in those being built for boomerang twenty-somethings in the last year alone, as they struggle to afford their own homes. This means, of course, that worried Golders Green mothers can finally keep an eye on their little Moishes to make sure they’re not sleeping with non-Jewish women.

But it’s not only graddy annexes that are on the rise: it turns out that Britain is going through a general annexe obsession. Extension business Homelodge is constructing one annexe a week, compared with 10 per year in 2011. Some are being built as home offices, some for au pairs. But most are still being built to house frail members of the family — the traditional “granny annexes”.