It’s better to go random than a friend, almost always works out better. My son and his closest friend made at college purposely decided not to room together as they don’t want to jeopardize friendship. He’ll meet people this year and it’ll be fine. Worst case he can do random again. |
He’s quiet with a difficult STEM major. |
My son will be living with his random roommate for the third year in a row. He may like his roommate. |
He needs to join some sort of club/extracurricular. It doesn't need to be an exclusive resume building activity -- just something to get out of his room and meeting a variety of people. That way he'll have choices when it comes to sophomore year housing. |
Mine is a premed, all business, even more reason to just find someone you are compatible with in living habuts and hours kept. They have so little free time. |
Thank you! That is good advice. This is the type of advice I am looking for. |
My older one stuck with high school friends and it worked out except for a weird hiccup sophomore year. |
I had a random roommate my freshman year of college, and it turned out fine. I'm sure my child will be able to handle the same. |
It's GOOD that he is not living with his high school friend. Chances are, they are both ready to grow in different ways.
I agree that he should join a club of some sort -- even if it's just something tied to his major. A fun club would be nice, too. As far as the roommate, they don't have to be best friends, but some general agreement on cleanliness and guests usually leads to a decent experience. |
Why not switch to business or finance? |
Not OP, but presumably he's interested in his stem major. Not everyone wants to take the easy way out. |
Or simply make a point of getting to know kids in his dorm. That's how most of us found roommates moving forward. It's okay that he's quiet, just needs to be open to conversations with the kids living around him. |
My god the level of hovering and enmeshment with these kids. It is bonkers. |
random is better.
also, you're a good mom and you've had 17-18 years with your kid. trust that you've taught him what he needs to handle these next few years. if he comes to you for advice, great. but the time for this kind of basic friendship advice is over. move on to today's issues: get a packing list done and let's worth through it. set up a time to FaceTime home once a week (or whatever you two decide). stop in career services sometime this first semester (or whatever college specific advice you have). I feel like what you're talking about is a recipe for anxiety, "dont f this up or you won't have a roommate next year either". that's not the message anyone needs now. |
Thread title should be mama drama instead |