Anonymous wrote:Damn. I just read one page and I'm baffled. In our family, we'd have no issue just outright asking what's up with graduation? I mean, is it wrong to ask?? Seems natural to me. Yikes. I lol at some of you who seem to have extremely formal relationships with your extended family members but no biggie on going on vacation together 🙄
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just have a normal conversation with him! Most normal conversations i have with people I don't see very often involve asking them what they are up to and what is going on with their lives. Then see how he answers. If he does not bring it up, I would not bring it up either.
+1 I can't imagine seeing a college-aged nephew and not asking "how's school?" He'll either tell you he's having a hard time and taking longer to graduate, or he switched majors or is double-majoring or something, or he studied abroad and didn't get all the required credits, or that he quietly graduated early and is building a company in his parents' basement.
If you care about the kid talk to the kid. If you care about embarrassing his mom for being proud of her kid on Facebook in the past, I guess you'll probably find some way to do that.
+2 Or he took a semester off for mental health issues, or Covid disrupted his education, or he will be graduating this December, or it's still up in the air. OP IRL you can ask gently and not make anyone uncomfortable, and be a supportive aunt.
Selective universities don't have December graduations. That's a state school thing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OMG, SIL is that you? Small world here on DCUM.
(Kidding. Maybe. But you know, it's totally possible.)
What would you want your family to do if the situation were reversed? Ask nosy questions?
It's not nosy, it's perfectly normal conversation and it will be the elephant in the room that the oldest of the cousins didn't graduate from college like he was supposed to. Y'all are freakin weird.
Anonymous wrote:"So John, what are you up to this summer?" would typically lead into John's future plans.
Anonymous wrote:OMG, SIL is that you? Small world here on DCUM.
(Kidding. Maybe. But you know, it's totally possible.)
What would you want your family to do if the situation were reversed? Ask nosy questions?
Anonymous wrote:OMG, SIL is that you? Small world here on DCUM.
(Kidding. Maybe. But you know, it's totally possible.)
What would you want your family to do if the situation were reversed? Ask nosy questions?
Anonymous wrote:Well I would just ask because you need to give a grad gift if he graduated.
I agree with this. this is not HS, OP. People take time off, people take smaller course loads, maybe decide to change majors or add a minor , etc. There are tons of reasons to take more than 4 years to graduate. It's not a big deal OP, I don't know why you are thinking about this so much. Just MYOB.Anonymous wrote:Wow! So, he might need another semester; how is this any of your business? Maybe he lost a year due to a pandemic? Or is he on a college team if he is an athlete and wants to play that year?
I am confused about who is"supposed" to graduate and what is there to ignore? People graduate college on many different schedules, and you are truly evil. Your thoughts betray the darkness of your mind.
No, you're just being nosey. Anonymous wrote:I can’t imagine college and internships NOT coming up when chatting with family who have college-aged children. I bet the family and kid has a canned line of b.s. to feed everyone. Make sure you ask follow-up questions and watch the lies fall apart.