Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I find it very hard as I have the opposite problem. I try to step back, and my college kids constantly want my advice, input, help. I don't think a single day has gone by without one of them having some small, medium or large dilemma about something. Today it's my ds who has a summer job offer but not the job he truly wants, and how to juggle this offer with this other job he wants but is waiting on a response for, and this other third job...I find it exhausting and I do not want to give input. I often resist and do not, but then it weighs on me.
This is a cautionary tale for you parents out there will kids who are middle/high school. They are like this because:
a. They have not formed judgement because they were always told what to do/like
b. If they have opinions, they don't trust them
c. They want your thoughts because they are afraid you will come in with an opinion later; why not just cut to the chase
d. They are so afraid of failure or a misstep since they have been told forever that a mistake could "ruin their chances at" x, y, or z
d. They know you don't trust them
yeah not so sure about that. that’s alot of conclusions based on the fact that PPs AC reaches out for advice or to talk. Sometimes they just want to talk it out or they dont trust themselves. I think it’s nice that they talk to their parents still. A lot of ACs put up walls and communication drops once they leave the nest.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I find it very hard as I have the opposite problem. I try to step back, and my college kids constantly want my advice, input, help. I don't think a single day has gone by without one of them having some small, medium or large dilemma about something. Today it's my ds who has a summer job offer but not the job he truly wants, and how to juggle this offer with this other job he wants but is waiting on a response for, and this other third job...I find it exhausting and I do not want to give input. I often resist and do not, but then it weighs on me.
This is a cautionary tale for you parents out there will kids who are middle/high school. They are like this because:
a. They have not formed judgement because they were always told what to do/like
b. If they have opinions, they don't trust them
c. They want your thoughts because they are afraid you will come in with an opinion later; why not just cut to the chase
d. They are so afraid of failure or a misstep since they have been told forever that a mistake could "ruin their chances at" x, y, or z
d. They know you don't trust them
What about the adhd/asd kids who actually do have poor judgment?
Anonymous wrote:Yeah no. My child in college calls or checks in 3 times a week at the most. She is fine and I really have no worries. She did have girl drama one day and called crying but we talked it out and it was fine. I have a child in elementary school too so I am busy and don’t have much time to feed into that. I check Life 360 a few times a day and check her patterns and that is it.
Anonymous wrote:There comes a point where we "get rid of" worrying about them?
Anonymous wrote:People who need a sounding board ofter bombard you with their problems but then don't update you once it's no longer a worry for them
Anonymous wrote:By the time kids become adults, most caring parents need years to get rid of two decades of nature's conditioning to worry about them and protecting them.
If you are currently going through it, take deep breaths and have faith in them to eventually figure things out. They may struggle but they'll learn art of adulting.