Anonymous wrote:Don't you all remember going off to college? I'm not a homesick person but it was hard in the beginning. If you see your kids too often or let them fly home too often it means they're making less friends at school.
Anonymous wrote:Don't you all remember going off to college? I'm not a homesick person but it was hard in the beginning. If you see your kids too often or let them fly home too often it means they're making less friends at school.
Anonymous wrote:Don't you all remember going off to college? I'm not a homesick person but it was hard in the beginning. If you see your kids too often or let them fly home too often it means they're making less friends at school.
Anonymous wrote:It depends on the kid. When my son went away, he was a five hour plane ride. For his freshman year we agreed somebody would visit once a month or he'd come home. But he'd get to see family once a month, somehow. He was not sure he'd stay at that college through his freshman year, then all four years, etc. Now he is in med school there. For sophomore year he was open to it being every other month. After that it was every 2-3 months. But we FaceTime and/or text daily. He's a mama's boy.
When my daughter went to school she was also a five hour plane ride away. She was an hour away from DS. So if we visited one, obviously we visited the other. I think they saw each other once or twice a month separate from us visiting our son. She would have been fine leaving at the end of August, coming home for Thanksgiving, then winter break, then spring break, then summer. MAYYYYYBE she would have wanted a visit around February?
We're a close family though. This is unusual.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Im wondering if some of these posters turn into the parents who are guilting dcum posters about sp bring every holiday at home after they are grown, married, with kids, and want to start their own family traditions but have to navigate two sets of needy parents.
what?
She/he is wondering, these parents that are heart broken about only seeing their kids at parents weekend, then Thanksgiving then Christmas... are these the same parents that make holidays a nightmare when their kids are grown.
I vote, yes, they are.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Im wondering if some of these posters turn into the parents who are guilting dcum posters about sp bring every holiday at home after they are grown, married, with kids, and want to start their own family traditions but have to navigate two sets of needy parents.
what?
Anonymous wrote:Im wondering if some of these posters turn into the parents who are guilting dcum posters about sp bring every holiday at home after they are grown, married, with kids, and want to start their own family traditions but have to navigate two sets of needy parents.
Anonymous wrote:Im wondering if some of these posters turn into the parents who are guilting dcum posters about sp bring every holiday at home after they are grown, married, with kids, and want to start their own family traditions but have to navigate two sets of needy parents.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Visiting your student in college might just induce a great deal of anxiety in them. If you go, stay in a hotel (not their apartment) take all their laundry to a laundromat, scrub their bathroom and kitchen, take them to dinner and leave. They have no time to waste socializing and even if it looks like they have nothing to do, they are sweating about something they have to turn in at midnight and aren’t really enjoying the visit. I know you see a visit as a mini-vacation but for them it’s work.
Sounds like solid advice, but when I visit my kid - who is having a happy freshman experience - he seems excited to get off campus for dinner or some sightseeing with me. My take is that he likes the brief reprieve from the stress bubble. And a change of pace from the d-hall.