the more I suggest staying close, the more my children want to go further away. 🤣 |
Do you have anxiety? Let go some, promise it'll be ok. Logistically and for budget, preference was to stay on same coast. Otherwise, encouraged them to spread their wings - grow, expand horizons (beyond local bubble), enjoy the freedom and fun of youth! It's a small chapter in life, going away to school doesn't equate to staying away. |
I would be very happy if STEM-focused DC went to GMU or UMCP or UMBC, but I would insist they live in on-campus housing so they get the college experience and are ready to live on their own wherever they end up working. |
Same! no regrets. My kids have the opposite upbringing and unless they get a scholarship or unique opportunity in another area, I prefer them to attend a college that has some tie to our family or extended family or second home. |
But some of us recognize that even if our kids lived 30 mins away, we wouldn't see them weekly. They would have a 40-50 hour job, friends, a SO, and a life with people their age. So we might still only see them 2 times per month. We also have a life with our friends. To us, that is happiness, everyone doing what they love. DOesn't mean we "love our kids any less". One kid was actually in town for 4 days recently (lives 1K+ away). We had other plans, a yearly volunteering event we do for disabled kids--cannot reschedule that and those kids need our help. So they saw their friends and their sibling over 3 days, and we saw them for 6 hours before they had to fly home. |
+1 If anything, not being physically close to your kids means when you do gather, it is truly quality time. We have a 26yo living 2K and a 21 yo 3K away at college. We saw the 26yo for over 30 days in the last year. Thanks to vacations (we invite and pay for them and any SO), holidays and us visiting them. They've seen their sibling almost as much. I guess I don't get it---if my kids lived 45 mins away, I still would likely only see them 2-3 times per month for part of a day. They would have a life with their work (40-50 hours/week), work friends, other friends, a SO, and just being a 20 something. So sure we might see them on Friday evening or Sat afternoon 2 times per month. But I certainly wouldn't expect them to spend all weekend with us. Just like I wouldn't plan to spend all weekend with them---we have friends, hobbies, activities that we enjoy and would want to live our life. I think that is healthy. I would never expect my kid to spend Sat day and night with their parents every weekend when they are 25. |
+1 I had to get away for my own mental health, but always envied friends who had tight familial bonds. I will support my kids with whatever decision they make (and of course that we can afford), but have intentionally tried to cultivate an environment that they want to be in close proximity to. |