Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Good lord. Let him be. Tell him to grow UP!
+1 Less than a week?! Do not call the RA!
Absolutely not! This is not helpful. Encourage him to join a club that interests him and to get involved. Also tell him that every freshman feels this way, even his roommate. It seems like people already have friends, but nothing is established right now. Everyone is in the same position as he is. He will meet people, but it can take a while for true friendships to be established. He needs to work through this on his own. Don’t call the school. You can check in with him by phone. Give him some time. The school May end up sending him home due to COVID anyway
Anonymous wrote:Oh noes, your kid has been unhappy for less than a week?!
OP this is the time for your kid to learn. Grow up, figure things out for themselves. Unhappiness happens in life sometimes - let them mature and deal with it.
Do NOT call the RA! DO NOT DO THIS! Stop micromanaging and leave him be!
Anonymous wrote:Oh my god, OP, do NOT call his RA.
I was an RA for three years of grad school. Parents do not call for things like this. The only time parents called me was on 9/11.
Except for the bizarre, neurotic foreign parent who didn't understand how college dorms work. She would talk at me for hours about her "child's" (the girl was two years younger than me) anxiety and kindergarten accomplishments.
All of the RAs, who are essentially kids who have undergone a week or two of team building exercises with the other RAs to train, gossip about the residents. The RAs have friends among the residents. Do not set your kid up for ridicule as the crybaby with the weird mom like this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Good lord. Let him be. Tell him to grow UP!
+1 Less than a week?! Do not call the RA!
Anonymous wrote:Please help me figure out if or what I should do to help.
My DS has been at school for less than a week and is unhappy - he is telling me he is lonely, doesn't have friends and doesn't like his classes (first ones were today).
His roommate has other friends and leaves him out, it's hard to meet others given covid restrictions.
The school has various clubs but they are meeting virtually and I don't think he has enough to do. He cried to me on the phone last night - I think he expected to love it and is so upset that he does not.
I'm normally not a helicopter parent at all and my DS is very independent.
Is there anything I can do to help? I don't want to call his RA behind his back and I'm not even sure how to do that - I never met the RA and have no idea who he or she is.
I would love to have someone check up on him but how could I even do that? I just don't want him to fall into a state of depression.
Maybe I should let him work it out on his own, but I'm also worried that it will get worse.
Any advice? Please be nice - he's my oldest and its hard to send a child away during this time.