Anonymous wrote:Time to cut the cord a little bit and have some faith that your son is now an adult or about to be and that you have raised him to be able to function.
This sounds like helicoptering parenting to the extreme.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wouldn't a less drastic measure be to call the housing office and ask about a non-single room? It's possible now that housing assignments are out that there is another freshman in the opposite position and would want a single.
+1
OP here. We did that but are far down a waiting list. People don't want to be in this dorm for other reasons as well (noise and distance from classrooms and dining halls).
The only silver lining I see is that there will be some other freshmen in the same situation, so perhaps they will form bonds more quickly than students with assigned roommates, and it's always possible that he could have been assigned a roommate with whom he had a serious problem.
Anonymous wrote:I had a single my first semester of college. Your fears are valid. I'm an introvert, and having no roommate made it more difficult for me to meet people. No one to have lunch with the first week, that sort of thing.
On the flip side, he can have all the sex he wants in that room without coordinating it with a roomie.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wouldn't a less drastic measure be to call the housing office and ask about a non-single room? It's possible now that housing assignments are out that there is another freshman in the opposite position and would want a single.
+1
Anonymous wrote:Wouldn't a less drastic measure be to call the housing office and ask about a non-single room? It's possible now that housing assignments are out that there is another freshman in the opposite position and would want a single.