I hate to tell you this but there are a lot of kids that don't come from families that can afford to take a week off to move their kids into college. I went to Univ. of Michigan in the 80s and remember some rich kids who arrived with families, furniture, cars and wardrobes and other (less wealthy) kids who came alone on a bus with the bare essentials. They all survived. |
I think you need to get her a dog. |
This ain't the 80s anymore, dude. BTW, what "bus" even goes directly to a school? I mean, how far are we talking? Is this a cross country bus or a city bus... |
Or a hobby. |
+1 It will make the kid feel much happier too. Sounds like they are close. You are lucky to have such a great mom as a wife |
The bus issue is not the topic of this thread. That was posted by another person. Can we please stick to the OP's issue? Or, start your own topic about bussing students to college. |
Or maybe DD is desperate and ready to get away from an overbearing, overprotective mom and have space to breathe and be herself. |
I wouldn't consider her actions (if true) to be "great mom" material. In my opinion, a great parent prepares their kid to function independently and has the confidence in their ability as a parent to let her kid fly on their own. |
Actually OP mentioned bussing his brother and that he thought they should do something similarly low-key. Since you seem to be such a vocal advocate of it, I suggest you start a thread. Do it in the "colleges and universities" forum and report back how it goes ![]() |
+2 When I went off to college I missed my mom so much. A few extra days to get used to the routine of college with her close by would have been really helpful |
Our family is on life360. Everyone likes it, especially if anyone is traveling. We also like Snapchat location feature and send/post life snippets. It's fun and not intrusive. That the end of it, no staying nearby to help settle, etc. |
I went to a state school back in the 80's. No one. And I mean NO ONE showed up with just a duffel bag and a comb....and on a bus no less. Even poor people wear clothes, bring sheets, towels, school supplies and a computer if their degree requires it. Dorm rooms tend to be tiny so even the wealthy kids were limited as to what they could bring. I don't recall ever seeing a kid bring a wardrobe into their dorm room (where would they put it??). |
I am OP and yes, this is more the case. DD can't go about her daily business w/o Mom constantly checking in. She dies the same with me and it's annoying. And us, when my brother went to West Point he was put on a bus and that was that! |
I am also fascinated by the idea of these buses that are apparently crossing the country and depositing people at their college. Where I went to college, which was a pretty cushy private school, we had one dumpy bus that ran only during limited business hours and took you in a loop about a mile away, to public transit, and left. How awesome would it have been if there was some kind of magical schoolbus stopping state to state and picking up kids, dorm equipment in tow, and depositing them at their university? Sign me the hell up. |
Sounds like you have real contempt for her. |