I did suggest that to her but she is not interested. What she likes is not something marketable. She is heading what she thinks is going an unpleasant way now but very marketable. For the first month + I tried to tell her not to worry and to do what you said in terms of taking specific courses to make her major more skilled-based. She would not hear of it, said everyone she knows is doing "harder things" so she felt silly doing something so easy (right now her GPA is through the roof, she finds it all ridiculously easy), and she insisted she needs a marketable degree and to do something more challenging. So yes, I am very anxious about how her spring semester is going to be though I did get some reassuring feedback about the coursework on a different board. |
| Doors close - that usually decides a major. She doesn't do well enough in a prerequisite and can't continue to a particular major. That's reality. It's not unusual, it's not terrible. It's ordinary. |
I understand, believe me. But the thing is, you can only be the trash can if you slam the lid down, like your DH is doing. Otherwise, you are not the trash can, you are in the muck with her, allowing her to churn on this and wind up the anxiety spiral. I know that it feels dismissive, but you can do it gently and also I think that's kind of the point: The perseverating she is doing is not a good use of time and *should* be dismissed. Having dealt with my DS's anxiety for several years, I've really come to believe that one of the reasons young people are so anxious these days is that it's become common in parenting to listen too much to "silly" thoughts. I had a really loving, supportive mother, but she was a product of her times and she sometimes *was* dismissive: "Alright, enough nonsense!" "I've heard enough of this." "Time to stop complaining, go outside and get some fresh air." Today, this is frowned on, but I think that's wrong. CBT, which has the best success in treating anxiety, tells us that focusing on unhelpful and irrational negative thoughts feeds anxiety. So allowing her to talk and talk and talk about this is making her anxiety about it worse. And note too: Engaging in these conversations is also making *your* anxiety worse as well. So you are feeding each other in a very negative way. A kind of co-dependency.
Literally millions of college students pick a major every year, millions change their major, some like their major, some don't, and for many it doesn't matter much what they major in. What consequences are you worried about? |
I don't think it's overstepping to rationally discuss the implications of her choices. If she majors in accounting, she won't be able to study abroad, it will be very intense and involve summer study. If she majors in x, there will be other implications. Pick a path. Yep, choices are hard. Either way, she will figure it out, and things will work out. |
| OP, does she give her attention to sharing her anxiety rather than putting the effort into the hard work of studying difficult material? |
No, she's always been very hard working (she has a job on campus as well) |
Yes, she said all that, and studying abroad was something extremely important to her (languages are her passion, she is continuing with that a bit, but minimally). Now she is going to not study abroad, and as you say not going to have a summer either. It all sounds terrible to me...But she knows all this and still seems to be going for it. I just worry it's the wrong path. |
|
OP, your DD's at a point where she needs to make a list of types of jobs that she might be interested in. That will take research. The jobs on her list can be diverse and can change as she learns more or changes her mind, but it's about exploring her options. Then she can look into what she needs on her resume to get hired for each job.
Once she has a list of jobs that she wants to consider, she can start looking for courses, internships, clubs, informational interviews, independent studies with professors, etc, to learn more about the career options, build a network and get things on her resume that indicates interest. It's a process. I literally kept a word document with career options and hyperlinks to job postings, internships and other opportunities starting Christmas of freshman year of college. It was a working document for me. Some of the things I found were for college seniors or even were graduate programs, but I put them in the document so I had them as a reminder and looked at the pre-reqs to apply to the opportunity later. She's not floundering to not have the full answer at 19 yo. But it's time for her to work on figuring out more of an answer for herself over the next few years so she's not in the same place at graduation. |
Six kids all grown all through graduate or Law or MD school. We said nothing. When they asked us we suggested looking at the coursework for each major and internships available from their college. We also had one that their passion was snowboarding. They majored in engineering, got their first job with a large company corporate offices in Colorado that sold sporting equipment, went to law school specialty in patents and intellectual property. Another one of ours went to grad school got a Masters in Textiles with an Engineering bachelor's. Now CTO at a great startup. We just encouraged them to love learning. |
Maybe it is, but there's really no way to know and not much you can do about it. That's a thought for your own trash can. |
I think the very hard part for me is I *could* do something about it: If I told her that it may not be right for her and she should consider something else, she would likely listen, and it might save her a lot of stress and grief for me to do that. |
|
"What she likes is not something marketable"
This is just not true. Everything can be marketable and many people are doing jobs that were not related to their college majors (myself and my DH included). My adult child is making money in acting and one my good friend's kids is a model. (actually 2 of my friends kids are models). My business kid is already working in his field which is not big firm consulting. Its a retail industry that he likes. There are many paths to success= you can make something marketable or find something else to do but this amount of worrying will not help. |
| OP, are you by chance an Indian family? |
No, why? |
| Jeez, can we stop with the stereotyping? |