Anonymous wrote:nothing bad can come from calling. maybe the roommate is annoyed by your dd - but she just says, I didn't know my mom would call your mom! that's the WORST that can happen if you call. If you dont call, who knows.
Anonymous wrote:Thank you for all your thoughts. I'm the OP. I really like the girl's mom--she's someone I could be close friends with if we were from the same home town. I need to sleep on this (and of course it's way to late to call now) but I think I'll call her tomorrow.
My daughter really likes this girl and they are fairly close. The sleep issue has crept up over the past 3 weeks. It's definitely something that started out feeling very normal "oh, XX is just tired lately" to feeling decidedly not normal (enough that she reached out to me for advice).
Anonymous wrote:95% chance this is depression, but I want to throw out mono as a possibility too. I got it in college and barely left my dorm room for the better part of a couple of months.
Anonymous wrote:Don’t think DD should ignore the issue. I think DD needs to talk with roommate about being concerned she’s sleeping so much. If roommate doesn’t change, talk to RA/RD.
That said a lot of you are making a diagnosis of mental health. It could be mono (going around DCs campus) or something else.
Try not to jump to conclusions.
I think any conversations with the school or parents should stick to the facts - she’s sleeping a lot. That’s it and that’s all you know. Not in a position to diagnosis anything else and it would be out of bounds to suggest anything else. Stick to the facts.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I do not understand what the heck is wrong with the MYOB posters. Are these the same type of people who would walk past an unconscious victim in the street instead of calling for help? These are the same type of people who ignored Kitty Genovese's cries? Do you want other people to do the same if your kid is sick or in in danger?
Depressed kids commit suicide. It's not morally okay to ignore this. First step would be for OP's kid to tell someone in charge at the college. Thank you for caring about someone else's kid, OP.
No need to be dramatic. The majority of depressed kids do NOT commit suicide. And the amount of public apathy towards Kitty was exaggerated.