Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She didn't go off to utopia. She went off to learn away from home. She shouldn't expect to be happy 100% of the time. My friend and I just met for lunch - she had a horrible dream last night, spilled hot tea on herself, and is worried about her job and boyfriend. But on social media she posted a pic of her breakfast and raved about it. Had we not gotten together I wouldn't know the full picture.
For the record, I went out with friends exactly twice in college. I went to exactly one bar, zero parties. I worked through a work/study job and really enjoyed working in the registrar and the people I worked with. I really liked some of my classes, really disliked some, and was meh about others. One time I wore two different sneakers to school by accident. I bonded with one girl over how much our teacher favored another girl. I can't remember her name now. I lived at home. I had brunch with my grandparents every Sunday morning. I basically had a B average.
Humans are meant to experience the full spectrum of emotions. We're not meant to be happy all the time. 50% happiness during waking hours seems great to me. I think she just needs to adjust her expectations and appreciate the smaller things.
NP. I find this fascinating.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DD is in a rut, and I don't know if this is normal, if she needs to transfer, needs another change, needs to suck it up, etc.
She is a sophomore science major at a very good school. She has great grades, good friends, and is healthy. She says that she is unhappy "about 50% of the time." She studies all the time, but perhaps this is normal for science majors with good grades? She sees images on social media of her friends "living it up" and seeming "so happy" at college, that she feels like she is missing out.
I told her that people only like to portray perfect lives on social media, but I am wondering if college really should be the best 4 years of her life? I want her to be happy. I do not know if being unhappy "50%" of the time is reason enough to look at another college?
Any experience with any of this?
Friends "living it up" at the same college or easier colleges? I see my son's high school friends at Tailgate States living it up on facebook -- if living it up means being a drunk 3 nights a week and majoring in "marketing". My son's friends at peer colleges don't seem so belligerent and are clearly on another level.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DD is in a rut, and I don't know if this is normal, if she needs to transfer, needs another change, needs to suck it up, etc.
She is a sophomore science major at a very good school. She has great grades, good friends, and is healthy. She says that she is unhappy "about 50% of the time." She studies all the time, but perhaps this is normal for science majors with good grades? She sees images on social media of her friends "living it up" and seeming "so happy" at college, that she feels like she is missing out.
I told her that people only like to portray perfect lives on social media, but I am wondering if college really should be the best 4 years of her life? I want her to be happy. I do not know if being unhappy "50%" of the time is reason enough to look at another college?
Any experience with any of this?
Friends "living it up" at the same college or easier colleges? I see my son's high school friends at Tailgate States living it up on facebook -- if living it up means being a drunk 3 nights a week and majoring in "marketing". My son's friends at peer colleges don't seem so belligerent and are clearly on another level.
Anonymous wrote:My DD is in a rut, and I don't know if this is normal, if she needs to transfer, needs another change, needs to suck it up, etc.
She is a sophomore science major at a very good school. She has great grades, good friends, and is healthy. She says that she is unhappy "about 50% of the time." She studies all the time, but perhaps this is normal for science majors with good grades? She sees images on social media of her friends "living it up" and seeming "so happy" at college, that she feels like she is missing out.
I told her that people only like to portray perfect lives on social media, but I am wondering if college really should be the best 4 years of her life? I want her to be happy. I do not know if being unhappy "50%" of the time is reason enough to look at another college?
Any experience with any of this?

Anonymous wrote:She didn't go off to utopia. She went off to learn away from home. She shouldn't expect to be happy 100% of the time. My friend and I just met for lunch - she had a horrible dream last night, spilled hot tea on herself, and is worried about her job and boyfriend. But on social media she posted a pic of her breakfast and raved about it. Had we not gotten together I wouldn't know the full picture.
For the record, I went out with friends exactly twice in college. I went to exactly one bar, zero parties. I worked through a work/study job and really enjoyed working in the registrar and the people I worked with. I really liked some of my classes, really disliked some, and was meh about others. One time I wore two different sneakers to school by accident. I bonded with one girl over how much our teacher favored another girl. I can't remember her name now. I lived at home. I had brunch with my grandparents every Sunday morning. I basically had a B average.
Humans are meant to experience the full spectrum of emotions. We're not meant to be happy all the time. 50% happiness during waking hours seems great to me. I think she just needs to adjust her expectations and appreciate the smaller things.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What are her goals for after college?
I had the time of my life in college, but had small dreams, so I could let a few things slide and wasn't impacted too badly. I ended up with a 3.5 GPA from one of the best public schools in the country and went on to a meh PhD program in economics. Now I work for the gov't. Totally happy.
The people I know who were miserable in college were the ones who wanted to go on to med school and felt that any slip-up would derail their lives.
OP here - thank you. Yep, she is on a med school track and anything below an A is unacceptable to her. Does she just have 2.5 more years of misery to deal with?
Anonymous wrote:What are her goals for after college?
I had the time of my life in college, but had small dreams, so I could let a few things slide and wasn't impacted too badly. I ended up with a 3.5 GPA from one of the best public schools in the country and went on to a meh PhD program in economics. Now I work for the gov't. Totally happy.
The people I know who were miserable in college were the ones who wanted to go on to med school and felt that any slip-up would derail their lives.