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Can I Run Away From Home

Running Away at 20 from Home?

At 20 years old you can leave home and do what you want, there is nothing to get into trouble for except you better have a place to stay and something planned because it is not that easy.
Easy to be taken advantage of. You will not get into trouble if you are over 18 there is nothing your parents can do, except you will no longer have health insurance in their name, no longer have car insurance if you are riding on their policy, if you take a car they co signed on or are on the title of they can come and get the vehicle. Becoming an adult on your own is alot of responsibility and you need to have a plan, where to stay, how much it will cost you and a job, unless you plan to be a hobo on the street,most companies won't hire you unless you have a permanent address and phone.
think it through....please and do leave a note, because if your parents think you were taken the police get involved then that could have a nasty outcome and cost your court costs and alot of headache, leave a note and tell them you are sorry but you need space to think and are going to try to go on your own. They won't like it but it is perfectly legal if you do it the right way.

I'm 14, How can I run away from home?

what ever you do, don't run away. almost all the kids that do run away, usually end up on the streets, doing God knows what to get money for food and clothes. i would call child services or tell a teacher because it's there job to tell these kinds of things, and they'll help you.

Why do cats run away from home?

I have only had one cat run away from home. He left just before Christmas. I thought someone may have taken him in during the holidays thinking he was homeless but he still didn’t return home after New Years. So I posted flyers in my neighborhood and had 2 people call to say they saw him roaming the fields and woods only about 1/4 mile away from my house. He was certainly close enough to return on his own. I spent several weekends combing the area where he was sited calling for him but he did not appear. He has been gone for nearly 4 months now and I have taken down the signs. I don’t expect to see him again.Prior to his departure, he occasionally wandered and was gone anywhere from 2 days to 2 weeks at the most. He is 9.5 years old and has been doing this since he turned 3 years old. The only thing that changed in his life recently is that I got 2 new kittens in September (1 was a boy) and he didn’t like them at all. So in my case, I think he ran away from home due to a personality conflict or feeling threatened by my little male kitten.I have received some encouragement from others that they had a cat dissapear and it returned after 1 to 1.5 years. So there is still a ray of hope I will see him again.UPDATE 3–3–19My cat has been missing now for over 14 months. The woods where he was sited last year have been torn down last month in preparation of building new homes. I hope someone took him in. I don’t expect to see him again.

Is it legal to run away from home at 13 years old?

When I was 7 and my sister 4, we got angry at something or other our mom did or said. I don't remember 62 years later what it was. What I do recall was dumping our clothes, all of them, into our red wagon and pulling it down the road. Our mother was outside, watching us while she visited with a neighbor. We got a half block down our street, turned the corner, and made it another half block before reality set in and we got scared. We hot-footed our way back home.Tell me what you think about my sis and me. Do you feel we were justified? Did we have an intelligent plan? What could have happened if we'd succeeded?You are rightly judging our adventure, I'm sure. I beg you to consider that anyone older than you, even a high school sophomore, is thinking the same about a 13-year-old running away from home.Sure, it may be legal. Sure, it would be the stupidest thing you would do in your life even if you live to be 100. Find another, smarter and more mature way to solve your problems.

Can I runaway at 14?

When I was in 9th grade, one of my friends ran away.His father did just about everything, and when nothing worked, he said a few words on TV himself.My friend was back in a few months.We did not ask him why or how. None of us even knew he was going through family issues. After all he always liked to be deemed as the funniest guy of our class and put a mask on.He ran away because his father always told him he wouldn’t be able to do anything in life. He always failed all his classes and always got into fights, that was where it was coming from.He recalled running away with the attitude of, “I’ll show him what I can do.”He did not have to do anything himself.His mother prepared everything in the house for him and his father prepared finances for him.He had to work as a bus conductor all those months.Not only that but people looked down on him, tried to abuse him sexually and forced him to try drugs.He did not have a place and he slept in the bus. It was cold, and he did not have a jacket. He said his only option was to endure the cold until cold didn’t feel cold anymore.He did not shower until they stopped the bus near this public tap at midnight. Yes, at midnight.He had to get used to looking dirty.The driver did not even give him enough money. He barely had money for two meals a day.He mentioned that seeing other people eat pastries made him drool and he had realized what he took for granted. His family owned a bakery shop.When he saw people with their parents, he missed his own. But he put his guard up, couldn’t let go of his ego and mostly importantly, did not have the heart to go back.When he talked about it with me, he said, “Arsha I’ll do anything I have to but I won’t run away from home again.”You can but you shouldn’t.

Do male cats really run away from home?

It depends on the kitty's character. I had a male cat for 15 years and he hadn't ran away not even once. Probably your cat got scared from all the noises and fireworks also meeting a female is a possibility. He will come back. Every cat finds his way back home sooner or later. You should keep him indoors and give him a lot of attention and love. Also when he is in need you should find him a female partner. If he has everything he needs he will never run away again.

If you are 19 years old and run away from home, can your parents have the police arrest you?

To the people who answered seriously - thank you for your input.

To the people who insulted me - I'm researching for a novel, and I want to make sure I have my facts absolutely straight. I would have guessed that there's nothing police can do, I just wanted to make absolutely sure. But thanks for your insults anyway, it's good to know you're so much smarter than everyone else.

Why do dogs run away from home and do they ever come back?

Lots of reasons. There arw dogs famous in their towns for making social rounds. That end up having statues made of them.Some simply need more stimulation. Depending on breed of dog, some dogs are entirely bemused by the concept of staying put. I knew a glorious, athletic, show-breed Aussie that had a sitcom-like iterative situation with his ‘owner', who, after gathering his dog from wherever he was to be found that afternoon, spend a few months trying to improve the backyard kennels he devised until finally installing electric fencing. The dog could leap over most fences.Sheep herding dogs do not ‘guard' or ‘watch' property. They watch other *animals*. They report to and accompany the sheperd. Totally weird for this buff, whip smart canine to have to try to get this across to this lame physicist. Poor dog was getting ONE long walk, weekly. Else just some around-the-block jaunt before bed. I would leap over fences and dig myself out, too.I am aware of hunting dogs, including one who designated me his preferred human, who will take themselves on outings unto overnight. They seem be mostly recconnoitering, something akin to a bit of canine orienteering. This is annoying to neighbors, moderately disturbing to the dog's humans, mostly because dogs rarely are savvy about vehicles and often want to be social with other dogs behjnd fences, or pursue cats that give chase. I think it's good to the dog: dogs enjoy stimulation, and their noses allow them access to a world we don't know. Young dogs, especially, need a lot more exercise than many comprehend, and despite having enough exercise, will take advantage of loose gate latches, open doors, deactivated alarms.Rain *will* deter them from staying on scent and can keep them from finding their way back. I've picked up a sheepish dogs few times crom this.But it's not just fear, or thunder: its also simply the joy of exploration, and need to run.

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