Anonymous wrote:I graduated from college at age 23. By the time I was 24 I lived many states away and never talked to any of my college friends again. I'm 46 now and don't even remember their names. Maybe one was Nicole, but I'm not sure? Vanessa? I don't know. I'm happy. Not everyone finds their tribe in college, and that's okay.
Anonymous wrote:The only thing that seems socially inappropriate here is that her mother is telling her how many friends she should have. She sounds like a happy, involved, well adjusted, and social adult. But you will always find some reason to criticize how she runs her life. Soon, she will set her boundaries, move far away, and limit contact.
Anonymous wrote:I find this troubling. She has been “successful” in college—big state flagship—great grades, had internship, has job lined up etc but keeps in touch with 3 people from high school and just has a bunch of acquaintances from college activities that she does not interact with any of them outside of those activities. She lives with basically random roommates every year. She is unbothered by this, but I think it is socially inappropriate. Would this bother you?
Anonymous wrote:I find this troubling. She has been “successful” in college—big state flagship—great grades, had internship, has job lined up etc but keeps in touch with 3 people from high school and just has a bunch of acquaintances from college activities that she does not interact with any of them outside of those activities. She lives with basically random roommates every year. She is unbothered by this, but I think it is socially inappropriate. Would this bother you?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes this would bother me as the parent. Logically I know it's fine, everybody is just different, but I had such a polar opposite experience in college that I would wonder why.
What would do about it? Your job is done. It is your dd"s life. She has enough friends for her.
I didn't say I would do anything. Just that it would bother me. It would make me feel sad.
Anonymous wrote:I find this troubling. She has been “successful” in college—big state flagship—great grades, had internship, has job lined up etc but keeps in touch with 3 people from high school and just has a bunch of acquaintances from college activities that she does not interact with any of them outside of those activities. She lives with basically random roommates every year. She is unbothered by this, but I think it is socially inappropriate. Would this bother you?
Anonymous wrote:I find this troubling. She has been “successful” in college—big state flagship—great grades, had internship, has job lined up etc but keeps in touch with 3 people from high school and just has a bunch of acquaintances from college activities that she does not interact with any of them outside of those activities. She lives with basically random roommates every year. She is unbothered by this, but I think it is socially inappropriate. Would this bother you?