Anonymous wrote:Get her medical help to address the depression and ADHD. Community college and a job. If you feel so inclined, have her pay a nominal amount in rent that you give back to her when she launches. You know your kid better than us, will tough love or some handholding work better?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does everyone’s kid have ADHD, depression and/or anxiety?
Seems like it. At least in DCUM-land.
If you go elsewhere in the country you will see that young adults MUST figure out a way to launch as their families simply do not have the resources to support them. In fact, many of them MUST work in order for the family to meet basic expenses. And this is begins in high school when they first are able to work legally! If they go out on their own, they have to fully-support themselves and usually get roommates. They figure out how to get along.
Depressed because your BF/GF broke up with you? Anxious because there is a bully at your fast-food job? Tough. If you don't work, the family/you can't pay the electric bill or put gas in the tank. Get up, get out and get to work.
There is a whole different world outside DVM.
Anonymous wrote:Does everyone’s kid have ADHD, depression and/or anxiety?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a high school senior with ADHD and depression, who wants to go to college to have a social life, and I worry so much this will be her.
I'm so sorry OP, for the worry this is causing you.
I've been running scenarios in my mind, and who knows maybe my kid will keep it together. Do you bring her home give her no money and have her work? Enroll in community college?
I don't know. I wish you good luck.
OP here- I'm convinced she would have failed no matter what, but in hindsight, I would have (or next time will):
- had her waive all FERPA rights and give us full access to her grades, etc. that way I could have seen real-time when she started falling off a cliff, so we could intervene.
- got her set up with a tutor/Exec Function coach there who helped her stay on track weekly, complete assignments, etc
- watched her location and called her to tell her to get her as* to class when she was still in her dorm room
Although I now know she's never going to mature until she takes accountability and responsibility.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does everyone’s kid have ADHD, depression and/or anxiety?
Seems like it. At least in DCUM-land.
If you go elsewhere in the country you will see that young adults MUST figure out a way to launch as their families simply do not have the resources to support them. In fact, many of them MUST work in order for the family to meet basic expenses. And this is begins in high school when they first are able to work legally! If they go out on their own, they have to fully-support themselves and usually get roommates. They figure out how to get along.
Depressed because your BF/GF broke up with you? Anxious because there is a bully at your fast-food job? Tough. If you don't work, the family/you can't pay the electric bill or put gas in the tank. Get up, get out and get to work.
There is a whole different world outside DVM.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does everyone’s kid have ADHD, depression and/or anxiety?
Seems like it. At least in DCUM-land.
If you go elsewhere in the country you will see that young adults MUST figure out a way to launch as their families simply do not have the resources to support them. In fact, many of them MUST work in order for the family to meet basic expenses. And this is begins in high school when they first are able to work legally! If they go out on their own, they have to fully-support themselves and usually get roommates. They figure out how to get along.
Depressed because your BF/GF broke up with you? Anxious because there is a bully at your fast-food job? Tough. If you don't work, the family/you can't pay the electric bill or put gas in the tank. Get up, get out and get to work.
There is a whole different world outside DVM.
Anonymous wrote:My brother failed out of Duke, he came home and did odd jobs for a year this was 50 years ago so he really needed counseling. He ended up doing college part time and working. Got a degree at 27 in psychology, went to law school and was a lawyer until he retired.
My son (2020 graduate ) failed out of college 2 years ago. He stayed home for a semester, took 2 community college classes and worked a job for structure (caddy) and did counseling 1x a week June-December. Returned to college for Spring, took 4 classes. He will continue taking 4 classes a semester until he graduates. He will graduate 1 - 1.5 years late. He did take some school meet classes.
Anonymous wrote:She still has time to reset and her future is not set. Get her help and medication for ADHD and depression. Talk about moving her closer to home, get her enrolled in community college with a plan to transfer to a 4 year college. College is a difficult time and a LOT of teens don't handle the transition and new found responsibilities well. Bumps in the road is completely normal, some bumps will be bigger than others, but her future is still wide, wide open.
Anonymous wrote:Does everyone’s kid have ADHD, depression and/or anxiety?