Anonymous wrote:This is so difficult, OP. I'm an academic coach at health science center, and in the last few weeks I've met remotely with so many shell-shocked students who are lonely and already doubting their decision to matriculate. Our medical students started last week and there were already students crying by the third day because they're lonely and overwhelmed. Our dental students started last month and I can see that they're already starting to adjust. It just takes a bit of time and some encouragement to reach outside of their comfort zone to find new ways to connect. You might encourage him to see if he can schedule with a counselor on campus, although the wait times may be a few weeks. Most campuses have good support networks for students (advisors, RAs, student life staff, etc) who are eager to connect with students as they adjust to college life. Sending good thoughts to your son (and you!) during this difficult time.
Anonymous wrote: Thanks for all the advice. I really did read it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I had a hard first semester, no friends, lonely. It was a character-building experience. We can’t swoop in and solve all our kid’s problems. I know covid makes things totally different, but just be a listening ear for him and ask him how he could change things. Don’t call his RA. Please
I agree with not calling the RA but your experience is not relevant to this situation. There are no activities going on and all their classes are zoom. They cant even eat in the caferteria and students are staying in the doom.
So dont talk about your experience because honestly you have no idea what kids are facing.
Okay sure, it’s different. Forget I brought up my experience. It sucks for them, big time. But come on, they’re not in the trenches of a war, watching their friends die on the battlefield. They’re not facing the gas chambers of the Holocaust or hiding in an attic for years like Anne Frank. They’re not living in a house with 3 other families sharing one bathroom because they can’t afford a bigger place for their family. If you swoop in and “rescue” these kids when life is uncomfortable and hard, they won’t be able to handle it themselves later. Life is hard. Life is unfair. Support them, help them if they’re in a mental health or physical crisis. But you can’t tell me that mom calling the RA after ONE week when life is different is going to help that kid grow as a person.
+100. We all know this is hard on freshmen but parents need to stop with the end of the world whining.
It's not end of the world whining. It's trying to decide whether being in the current on campus environment is worth it from a financial and emotional perspective. I think it's something that OP's kid should consider.