Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid was burnt out from the pressures of a W high school, so she chose a lower ranked school to get out of the pressure cooker . Being a big fish in a small pond helped her blossom. I am proud that she could make that choice.
Lol she “chose” it. It wasn’t chosen for her. Sure. Ok.
Yeah, she turned down six more highly ranked schools. You can’t picture that I know.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As adults, we refer to our college years as the BEST years of our life! In actuality, was it really after one semester of school?? Be realistic with your children. There are a lot of “firsts” from roommates to living far away from home to homesickness.
I was pretty miserable through most of my college years, but I always gave my parents the impression that everything was great because it had been drilled into my head that I was suppose to be having the best time ever.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid was burnt out from the pressures of a W high school, so she chose a lower ranked school to get out of the pressure cooker . Being a big fish in a small pond helped her blossom. I am proud that she could make that choice.
Lol she “chose” it. It wasn’t chosen for her. Sure. Ok.
Anonymous wrote:Our kid at a top 15 LAC called home a lot in the first semester of her first year and sounded pretty miserable. We listened and didn’t say much. We knew that change isn’t always easy but is a part of life.
She came around and ended up loving it, ultimately married a classmate, and to this day counts several classmates among her best friends.
Give your kid time. Don’t baby him.
Anonymous wrote:College sucks compared to back in the day. The control freaks (parents, government, administration) have completely stunted and ruined growing independent and strong. It’s psychotic and depressing.
Anonymous wrote:My kid is in CS and complaining other kids with easy majors have much time and having more fun
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As adults, we refer to our college years as the BEST years of our life! In actuality, was it really after one semester of school?? Be realistic with your children. There are a lot of “firsts” from roommates to living far away from home to homesickness.
I was pretty miserable through most of my college years, but I always gave my parents the impression that everything was great because it had been drilled into my head that I was suppose to be having the best time ever.
I hope that's not what we are doing now.Anonymous wrote:My kid was burnt out from the pressures of a W high school, so she chose a lower ranked school to get out of the pressure cooker . Being a big fish in a small pond helped her blossom. I am proud that she could make that choice.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DC is a first year at a top 20 school. His experience so far has been mixed. I am struck by how many of his high school peers are having likewise mixed experiences so far. They are doing well academically but are hit with feelings of ennui. This cohort has been through so much — high school sophomore year interrupted mid-year, a Covid induced discontinuous high school junior year and crazy college application process high school senior year. These kids are so confused now in their first year of college. The sense I get is that these kids just lost a big chunk of their childhood, as the formative high school years were kind of ripped away from them. Talk of transferring, pausing education and going on cross country camping trips abound. Anyone seeing this / feeling this from this cohort of kids? I struggle to offer words of encouragement, namely that it will all sort itself out.
TBH, it sounds like you are describing kids/families who prioritized rank over fit. Now you are wondering why they don’t seem happy.
Generally speaking, if you make life decisions based upon pleasing/impressing others, you are unlikely to achieve personal fulfillment (though your social media might be awesome).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DC is a first year at a top 20 school. His experience so far has been mixed. I am struck by how many of his high school peers are having likewise mixed experiences so far. They are doing well academically but are hit with feelings of ennui. This cohort has been through so much — high school sophomore year interrupted mid-year, a Covid induced discontinuous high school junior year and crazy college application process high school senior year. These kids are so confused now in their first year of college. The sense I get is that these kids just lost a big chunk of their childhood, as the formative high school years were kind of ripped away from them. Talk of transferring, pausing education and going on cross country camping trips abound. Anyone seeing this / feeling this from this cohort of kids? I struggle to offer words of encouragement, namely that it will all sort itself out.
TBH, it sounds like you are describing kids/families who prioritized rank over fit. Now you are wondering why they don’t seem happy.
Generally speaking, if you make life decisions based upon pleasing/impressing others, you are unlikely to achieve personal fulfillment (though your social media might be awesome).