Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Would he agree to use some sort of coaching service for this? Long-term planning is a skill he should work on. You may also need to let him fail a bit. He has showed you that he can do this when motivated.
Why can’t the parents help with teaching the kids organizational skills and practicing it until they become perfect?
Anonymous wrote:I'm not saying this is the ideal outcome, but we have neighbors with a kid that sounds like your kid.
Has a college degree but never pursued any kind of career. Lives at home and holds a series of PT jobs, so he makes some money and keeps busy.
Kid is now in late 30s and parents are probably like late 60s and now look at their kid as eldercare so they can age in the house.
Doesn't seem like he will ever have a relationship and get married.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Name the field of study?? We can be more helpful if you narrow between say Marketing vs Social Service sector. I do think you are going to help him land an internship and then his first job. So maybe start seeing that clearly as opposed to hoping for something else to happen
OP here. Thank you everyone for the replies. He's in International Affairs, in DC. Wouldn't it be like shooting fish in a barrel? That's why I paid for a college in that location...
The study abroad program was a finite, structured event that was prominently described by his college, and so I think he had no trouble understanding the benefits and following application directions. But the nebulousness of not knowing where to look for an internship, when he has no friends and doesn't talk to his professors, is I believe what's tripping him up.
dp.. ok, but the fact that he was able to manage the study abroad program application process "because it was his dream program that he'd always wanted to do." tells you that if he *really* wanted something, he'd figure it out
Have him go to the college career services as a start, and ask them. Also, most colleges have career/internship fairs that he should be going to.
He may have SN, but he won't be handheld at work. At some point, he has to figure some of it out.
But, it sounds like even if you tell him what to do, he doesn't do it because he feels "overwhelmed". How is going to deal with deadlines and multiple projects at work? He has to figure it out.
OP here. That's the crux of the matter, PP, and my greatest long-term concern. He is slow, perfectionist and cannot multitask well. I can't live his life for him. I just don't want him ending up in my basement!
Anonymous wrote:Would he agree to use some sort of coaching service for this? Long-term planning is a skill he should work on. You may also need to let him fail a bit. He has showed you that he can do this when motivated.
Anonymous wrote:"I was the one who initiated his college search and managed all the deadlines". Then he shouldn't have gone to college, OP. He wasn't ready. He should have been the one applying, not you.
Anonymous wrote:I'm not saying this is the ideal outcome, but we have neighbors with a kid that sounds like your kid.
Has a college degree but never pursued any kind of career. Lives at home and holds a series of PT jobs, so he makes some money and keeps busy.
Kid is now in late 30s and parents are probably like late 60s and now look at their kid as eldercare so they can age in the house.
Doesn't seem like he will ever have a relationship and get married.