Anonymous wrote:My kid's in England for here undergrad. You'll live.
Anonymous wrote:I lived a six hour train ride away but only came home for thanksgiving, Christmas, and spring break. And sometimes only Xmas and one of the others.
Your kid really shouldn't come home from college more often than that. I think it is a little weird when college kids come home on the weekend a lot.
Anonymous wrote:I lived a six hour train ride away but only came home for thanksgiving, Christmas, and spring break. And sometimes only Xmas and one of the others.
Your kid really shouldn't come home from college more often than that. I think it is a little weird when college kids come home on the weekend a lot.
Anonymous wrote:What stuff? I brought two suitcases of clothes to college and bought what I needed there. Furniture, etc. was pretty much a legacy of whoever lived there before me. It stayed with the room.
Anonymous wrote:My 5yo DD informed me that I'd be driving her every day to *graduate school*!. OP, I dread the idea of her going really far away to college. She'd be fine, but I'd be so sad. Congrats to your son for the free ride, though. That's amazing!!
We'll see how she feels about that in twelve years!Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Question: so if your child attends college where you have to fly there, do you rent a storage locker for all their stuff??!!
Do you porn the boxes on a local friend to store in their garage?
My DD goes close by so brings it all home. Her friends who are from far away have a storage locker. Some share them. Some colleges provide on campus storage - mine did which was useful since it was a flight away.
To the 2 suitcase poster - ha ha! Even I took more than that to college 30 years ago, plus accumulated some things while I was there. Plus I had a bike, ski equipment, the ubiquitous milk crates, stereo, bedding (which now includes the foam egg crate pads and other bulky items). Def. more than you can take home in 2 suitcases at the end of the school year! My DD's stuff more than fills a large SUV.
Anonymous wrote:Does it really matter if they are close or far away? I'm being serious, not snarky.
How much did you go home in college? How many times did your parents visit?
I went to school about a 3 hour drive from home. The first time I went home was for Thanksgiving. I never went home for spring or summer break. My parents usually came to visit once or twice a year, though I'm fairly certain they didn't come my first year until family weekend in the spring.
Anonymous wrote:Question: so if your child attends college where you have to fly there, do you rent a storage locker for all their stuff??!!
Do you porn the boxes on a local friend to store in their garage?
Anonymous wrote:Question: so if your child attends college where you have to fly there, do you rent a storage locker for all their stuff??!!
Do you porn the boxes on a local friend to store in their garage?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I feel so much better reading the responses. A little. I'm reminded that my precious little snowflake isn't the only one going so far away. And that he will be fine. Which I already knew. It's ME who's struggling with it.
My son was an Ivy contender who was a shy, sweet mama's boy who competed against himself, not other kids. An ultra-competitive school would not be the right environment for him. That's why he went to Stanford. We agreed that either he would fly home or at least one of us would fly out to visit him once each month. We did this his entire freshman year. In his second year he went to a friend's house for Thanksgiving and went on a spring break trip with friends. In his third year he would tell us "We don't need to do a trip next month" many times.
I went across the country for college. If my parents had shown up every month to visit, i would have been mortified.