Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid goes to UMD. 40 minutes from home. He would come back during the weekend like clockwork. We were thrilled to see him and never asked him why. I would send him back with care package, washed and ironed his laundry, supplies.
Anyways, over the years, he comes less and less. Stays in an off campus apartment. During the summer, he comes but gets busy with his internships. We don't worry about it. He has friends, joined a few clubs, getting good grades, interning for money each summer etc.
Give your kid time. Don't create a problem where none exists.
+100
And he will look back with gratitude for the support his parents consistently showed him. AND, he’ll want to continue coming home to visit as he gets older, bringing his own family with him.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It sounds like your child is struggling with homesickness and adjusting to college life, which is completely normal, especially in the first year. Here are some things you might try to help with the transition:
1. Set Expectations for Staying on Campus – If they come home every weekend, they aren’t fully immersing themselves in college life. Encourage them to stay on campus at least every other weekend to start. Frame it as an experiment rather than a strict rule.
2. Validate Their Feelings – Let them know it’s okay to miss home, but remind them that discomfort is part of growing and that they will feel more at home if they give it time.
3. Encourage Small Steps Toward Engagement – They don’t need to jump into a bunch of activities all at once, but encourage them to try one new thing each week—attending a club meeting, going to a campus event, or studying with a classmate.
4. Help Them Find a Comfortable Space on Campus – If their dorm room doesn’t feel like home, maybe they can find a favorite study spot, coffee shop, or library space that feels welcoming.
5. Encourage Open Communication With the Roommate – Living with someone new is a challenge, and they might not become best friends. If issues arise, encourage direct but kind communication or seeking mediation from an RA.
6. Connect With Others in Similar Situations – A lot of freshmen feel the same way. Maybe they can find a classmate or another student who also goes home often and challenge each other to stay on campus one weekend.
7. Use Campus Resources – Many schools have counseling services, residence life support, or peer mentorship programs that could help them feel more connected.
Would they be open to setting a short-term goal, like staying on campus two weekends in a row or attending one club meeting in the next month? Sometimes small challenges like that make the adjustment feel more manageable.
Wow. You are really good at this. I was going to recommend setting up the boyfriend to get busted cheating so she wouldn't want to come home any more. I like your ideas better.
This is just ChatGPT-generated drivel.
Anonymous wrote:We had the same issue last semester, which was DD's first semester away, as she was a transfer and transferred in as a sophomore to a school ~2hrs away.
Last semester, just having turned 20, we kept telling DD to stop coming home to hang out w/ her one friend here, and a boyfriend that she stupidly started going out with in early August before she moved to campus.
We told her again and again to go to clubs/activities... she made a few friends, but not enough...
I did consider pulling the car, but those kind of actions cause all sorts of other repercussions, so we never went that far...
Eventually, and thankfully, her and the boyfriend broke it off, her grades suffered as a result of coming home too frequently, and not going back in time. When applying for internships, she saw companies wanted to know her current GPA. All that was a bit of a wake up call to her.
She rushed last month, and although we were initially not fans of that, i think it is good for her as it enabled her to find more friends and community on campus. Despite us telling her to go to clubs and activities last semester.
Sometimes, they need to just figure it out themselves. And it's just hard to make it happen.
I was beginning to have regrets that she was going away to college, but not far away enough... It seems to be better now. She hasn't come home yet... I would prefer it stays that way until at least Spring break.
Anonymous wrote:DC is going to a university ~2 hrs away from our home and keeps coming home on weekends. We also hear frequently about how much they want to come home when they are there (~50% acceptance rate). DC has yet to attend any club meetings and is having a hard time adjusting to living away from home, with a roommate, not having family nearby. Any advice?
Anonymous wrote:We had a family rule that we were not to come home before Thanksgiving.
I would set a date when you are going to visit them (stay in a hotel, one overnight) but they are not to come home until .... whenever. Spring break maybe.
Anonymous wrote:It sounds like he hasn't found his place on campus or made friends, which is pretty common at that age. After adolescence, forming bonds takes more effort than during childhood because self-consciousness makes it harder to let down walls. The hack for getting around this problem is to join a fraternity.
Pledgeship forces those walls down, creating the kind of fast friendships he probably made as a kid. By the end of the process, he won’t be asking to come home. When you talk to him on the phone or see him on breaks, he'll be talking about his college friends and experiences instead of reminiscing about high school or wishing things were the way they used to be.
He’ll also be set for the next three years: god status on campus, access to the best parties, tailgates, and girls, and a lucrative network that will open doors after graduation. There’s a reason fraternity men have higher GPAs, graduation rates, and starting salaries than GDIs.
Anonymous wrote:My kid goes to UMD. 40 minutes from home. He would come back during the weekend like clockwork. We were thrilled to see him and never asked him why. I would send him back with care package, washed and ironed his laundry, supplies.
Anyways, over the years, he comes less and less. Stays in an off campus apartment. During the summer, he comes but gets busy with his internships. We don't worry about it. He has friends, joined a few clubs, getting good grades, interning for money each summer etc.
Give your kid time. Don't create a problem where none exists.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It sounds like your child is struggling with homesickness and adjusting to college life, which is completely normal, especially in the first year. Here are some things you might try to help with the transition:
1. Set Expectations for Staying on Campus – If they come home every weekend, they aren’t fully immersing themselves in college life. Encourage them to stay on campus at least every other weekend to start. Frame it as an experiment rather than a strict rule.
2. Validate Their Feelings – Let them know it’s okay to miss home, but remind them that discomfort is part of growing and that they will feel more at home if they give it time.
3. Encourage Small Steps Toward Engagement – They don’t need to jump into a bunch of activities all at once, but encourage them to try one new thing each week—attending a club meeting, going to a campus event, or studying with a classmate.
4. Help Them Find a Comfortable Space on Campus – If their dorm room doesn’t feel like home, maybe they can find a favorite study spot, coffee shop, or library space that feels welcoming.
5. Encourage Open Communication With the Roommate – Living with someone new is a challenge, and they might not become best friends. If issues arise, encourage direct but kind communication or seeking mediation from an RA.
6. Connect With Others in Similar Situations – A lot of freshmen feel the same way. Maybe they can find a classmate or another student who also goes home often and challenge each other to stay on campus one weekend.
7. Use Campus Resources – Many schools have counseling services, residence life support, or peer mentorship programs that could help them feel more connected.
Would they be open to setting a short-term goal, like staying on campus two weekends in a row or attending one club meeting in the next month? Sometimes small challenges like that make the adjustment feel more manageable.
Wow. You are really good at this. I was going to recommend setting up the boyfriend to get busted cheating so she wouldn't want to come home any more. I like your ideas better.
This is just ChatGPT-generated drivel.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:50% acceptance rate - huh?
Does the OP mean they are letting their kid come home only 50% of the time? Acceptance rate to home?