Anonymous wrote:Past. The word you want is past.
Anonymous wrote:Past. The word you want is past.
Anonymous wrote:She will. Parenting a senior in a normal year is an emotional roller coaster. Then came COVID. There are a lot of strong feeling tied up in having your kid graduate and start college— officially make the transition from kid who lives in your house and for whom you are responsible to kid you might go for months without seeing and may or may not consult you on major decisions (that don’t involve your checkbook anyway).
I’m a senior mom have been a bit of an emotional mess this year, crying the last time my kid marched with band this fall, for example. Just like kids, parents have set ideas about these milestones and transitions. And most senior parents I know are struggling in one way or another. There has been no senior closure. There is so much uncertainty about if and when and how kids can start the next stage of their life. It’s emotionally exhausting.
As it turns out, I really hope my kid gets to start college in person and not online. But I know it will be fine if moving on campus is delayed a semester. It’s not ideal If his first semester classes are online, but he’ll get to campus eventually. But missing the graduation ceremony? For reasons specific to our family, that was a really big deal in my mind and it’s really upsetting me that I probably won’t get to see him march with his class. I’m just self aware not to post about it on FB 24/7 (Crying when no one else is around, OTOH...). Apparently your friend has been looking forward to helping her kid move on campus, shop for and set up a dorm, etc.
All of which is to say... cut us senior mamas some slack. Seniors are transitioning into being adults. So their moms are transitioning into parenting adults. And COVID, social isolation, lack of normal supports and rituals, and all the uncertainties surrounding the class of 2020 graduating and starting college makes it so much harder. And some people do better than others With uncertainty.
Try to be sympathetic, and re-jigger your FB setting to see her posts less often for a month or two. Once she knows what the fall plan is, and has some time to process, she’ll calm down.
These are not normal times. We all need to recognize people are coping in dofferent way.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your friend is dealing with money concerns, disappointment, self-induced parenting pressure, and probably global-pandemic-pressure-at-large-with-this-as-an-outlet all during a bat-soup crazy time.
This is the time for grace.
Outside of social media (which is not required reading, by the way), how is she acting in real life? Have you called or texted her and checked in to allow her some moments of real worry and frustration? If not, why not? That's what I do when I know someone is going through a hard time.
Hide the feed. Pick up the phone. See what happens.
We’ve talked by phone or texted a few times. She is less obsessed with it then and I can shift the conversation to other topics. Maybe it’s the nature of that platform?
Social media is, by definition, someone's personal stage. It's their soapbox. They post to THEIR WALL, and you choose to see their wall in your feed.
Change the channel, OP. My goodness.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your friend is dealing with money concerns, disappointment, self-induced parenting pressure, and probably global-pandemic-pressure-at-large-with-this-as-an-outlet all during a bat-soup crazy time.
This is the time for grace.
Outside of social media (which is not required reading, by the way), how is she acting in real life? Have you called or texted her and checked in to allow her some moments of real worry and frustration? If not, why not? That's what I do when I know someone is going through a hard time.
Hide the feed. Pick up the phone. See what happens.
We’ve talked by phone or texted a few times. She is less obsessed with it then and I can shift the conversation to other topics. Maybe it’s the nature of that platform?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Past. The word you want is past.
She said past in her post. Clearly the title was an autocorrect.
Hope you sleep well tonight having pointed that out, jacka$$.
On a separate note, sounds like the mom is living through her daughter. I’d bet the daughter doesn’t care half as much as the mom does.
You definitely need to block her for a while.
Np. I think in this case the dd might be disappointed as well. My dd is a freshman in the fall and hope's to be there, not at home taking online classes. And I am not a momzilla.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Past. The word you want is past.
She said past in her post. Clearly the title was an autocorrect.
Hope you sleep well tonight having pointed that out, jacka$$.
On a separate note, sounds like the mom is living through her daughter. I’d bet the daughter doesn’t care half as much as the mom does.
You definitely need to block her for a while.
Anonymous wrote:Your friend is dealing with money concerns, disappointment, self-induced parenting pressure, and probably global-pandemic-pressure-at-large-with-this-as-an-outlet all during a bat-soup crazy time.
This is the time for grace.
Outside of social media (which is not required reading, by the way), how is she acting in real life? Have you called or texted her and checked in to allow her some moments of real worry and frustration? If not, why not? That's what I do when I know someone is going through a hard time.
Hide the feed. Pick up the phone. See what happens.