Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Weird take OP. Most of the best roommate situations are random. You can fill out the insurance waivers to keep on your insurance and the immunization forms and she can do the housing and meal plan. Otherwise, stop nagging her and just try to enjoy her company for a few more months.
Not nagging. She had to be reminded to complete the housing form or risk not having housing at all. My idea IS to quit reminding ( you call it nagging) and see what happens.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Fwiw OP I had to step in and essentially do the exact same thing for my high anxiety with depression DC. With depression it is hard to do basic things like getting out of bed and brushing teeth never mind something massive like handle the transition to college. We got DC therapy and medication and I handheld DC through the forms and due dates. It is not that she is Unmotivated as you state it. It is that she is struggling with depression. She will struggle with it even if she is not in college next year and the fact that all her friends have move forward in their lives and she is left behind may not help the situation. Then the idea of reapplying, that sounds awful. If she says she wants to go, take her at her word, know that it will be a very very bumpy first year but listen to her and support her. You need to come at the situation with more empathy vs expectation of ‘she Should Be Doing This.’ DC’s sophomore year was Far better, more settled, more balanced, positive outlook, etc and they are so glad they stayed on track with our support.
+10. This is truly helpful. Hoping your DC is doing better. Yes, depression is casting a cloud over the whole process. Seeking help and meds…
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Weird take OP. Most of the best roommate situations are random. You can fill out the insurance waivers to keep on your insurance and the immunization forms and she can do the housing and meal plan. Otherwise, stop nagging her and just try to enjoy her company for a few more months.
+1
My DS was matched with a terrific roommate late year. I filled out the medical info. Have her sit with you while you fill out the housing/meal plan.
Anonymous wrote:Weird take OP. Most of the best roommate situations are random. You can fill out the insurance waivers to keep on your insurance and the immunization forms and she can do the housing and meal plan. Otherwise, stop nagging her and just try to enjoy her company for a few more months.
Anonymous wrote:Fwiw OP I had to step in and essentially do the exact same thing for my high anxiety with depression DC. With depression it is hard to do basic things like getting out of bed and brushing teeth never mind something massive like handle the transition to college. We got DC therapy and medication and I handheld DC through the forms and due dates. It is not that she is Unmotivated as you state it. It is that she is struggling with depression. She will struggle with it even if she is not in college next year and the fact that all her friends have move forward in their lives and she is left behind may not help the situation. Then the idea of reapplying, that sounds awful. If she says she wants to go, take her at her word, know that it will be a very very bumpy first year but listen to her and support her. You need to come at the situation with more empathy vs expectation of ‘she Should Be Doing This.’ DC’s sophomore year was Far better, more settled, more balanced, positive outlook, etc and they are so glad they stayed on track with our support.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Think about what DD would do in that year off. If there's something cool she wants to do and/or you have the money to send her off to flit around Europe for 6 months, great. But if she's going to mope around the house and/or work part time gigs at Giant, I'd say no. If anything she'll end up even more disconnected from her peer group and likely more depressed. Her HS friends will be in college and no they won't be texting her back when she's sitting home bored bc they'll be off partying and making new friends. She won't have college friends. And in no universe did getting yelled at by a retail store middle manager ever make anyone's depression any better.
If there aren't specific gap year plans, much better to just go to the school she got into and see how it goes and then if she still doesn't warm up to it, fill out transfer applications.
Other option is she stays at home but takes a full schedule of classes at a community college, so she's at least earning some college credit and then can start filling out transfer apps with an eye to going where she wants to go the following year.
Anonymous wrote:Yeah no since it is driven by you and not her, this is not a good idea.
You want her to hagn around the house and be depressed?
She got into a good school. She says she wants to go.
Have her do the random selection for roommates. She doesn't need to pick someone out.
DO make sure she gets the housing info in. Kids who turn their housing info in past the deadline get screwed on housing often.