Anonymous wrote:Dad and college kid shopped for sheets and towels. A generous aunt bought a shower caddy.
Kid spent time choosing wall decorations. I bought a laundry basket.
They need a comforter but haven’t ordered one. I am not nagging more so maybe they will have a comforter and maybe they won’t.
Anonymous wrote:It's been decades since I went to college and a few years before we send our kids, but what purchases does a student really need beyond a week's worth of clothes, sheets and a towel, and a computer? You can buy pens and toothpaste and shampoo when you get there. Everything else is optional.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP - here. Thanks for all the helpful comments. But, some of you...yikes.
Sorry woman, you raised a dud of a son.
OP here - good luck to you and your family. I can't imagine being so certain of a damning judgement of another person (well, I guess it's two people) that you essentially know nothing about other than a few online posts that gave minimal tidbits of information. But you do you.
+1
PP is rotten to the core, OP. Ignore that noise.
No, this is what #boymom turns into. Little Johnny expecting mommy to take care of everything. I will teach my daughters to avoid kids like OP’s.
OP here - to clarify - DC has zero interest in mommy taking care of anything. You are reading into this with a strangely warped lens.
DC is 100% a minimalist. But I also think (as other PPs have noted) that DC doesn't quite "get" the bare bones of what he'll need at school. Then sprinkle in (his annoyingly ever present) contrary stance.
He's a great judge of character in his friends and girlfriends though, so probably unlikely to hang out with someone like you. (And a great student too.... so I'm not that worried)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Also, parents of young women going off to college.. these young men are what the dating pool will be made of. YIKES! Grateful to my MIL for raising a man that wasn’t apathetic and lazy.
It isn't apathy or laziness to realize you don't need a car load of miscellaneous, unnecessary stuff.
There seems to be an industry of selling useless dorm room stuff to people. No, you and your roommate don't need matching comforters or whatever. Most 18 year-olds probably already own 90% of what they need to take with them to college.
Anonymous wrote:We're two weeks from move in and DD finally is ready to start figuring out what she needs. Just got her roommate and dorm assignment this week which I think made it all more real. Also up to now it's been a busy summer with time away working at sleepaway camp and then a family trip.
She's my 2nd and I'm much more relaxed about it this time. I know she really doesn't need much.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Also, parents of young women going off to college.. these young men are what the dating pool will be made of. YIKES! Grateful to my MIL for raising a man that wasn’t apathetic and lazy.
It isn't apathy or laziness to realize you don't need a car load of miscellaneous, unnecessary stuff.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP - here. Thanks for all the helpful comments. But, some of you...yikes.
Sorry woman, you raised a dud of a son.
OP here - good luck to you and your family. I can't imagine being so certain of a damning judgement of another person (well, I guess it's two people) that you essentially know nothing about other than a few online posts that gave minimal tidbits of information. But you do you.
+1
PP is rotten to the core, OP. Ignore that noise.
No, this is what #boymom turns into. Little Johnny expecting mommy to take care of everything. I will teach my daughters to avoid kids like OP’s.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Mine rebukes any conversation/offer about getting stuff for the year or the dorm - they leave in a week. Hasn't even let us know about move in window (which we know from school has been assigned but we didn't ask based on other reactions).
Needs essentially everything. I bought sheets but otherwise staying out of it - should be interesting!
I would be really worried. He could just be taking a minimalist approach to packing, which is very smart, or he could have a little mild separation anxiety, but he could also be seriously depressed or just not want to go to college.
Chances are you can still get the tuition money back.
If you have a lot of money, let nature take its course.
If you’re not rich, find the school’s full, partial and medical withdrawal deadlines. I’d tell your son that it’s fine if he takes a minimalist approach to packing, but that college is too expensive for you to gamble on whether he’s going to try to do well in college.
Ask him whether he actually wants to go to college.
If not, talk to him about his plans for doing something else. Tell him about whatever limits there will be on your support.
If he does want to go, ask him for some sign you can use before the various refund deadlines to know that he’s reasonably on track and that it’s worth letting the college keep the tuition money. But be practical. If he tries engineering and can’t cut it, make it clear that you’ll pay for him to major in something he can handle, and that he should use jobs and activities to prepare for work, rather than his major. And, if possible, try to get him into a telecounseling program. See if there’s a way to pay a tutor to support him, help him stay organized and talk to you if something is seriously wrong.
If he just isn’t responsive or isn’t realistic when he responds, tell him that you’re going to proceed as if he has serious health problems and try to arrange for a health-related enrollment referral.
In that case, start by taking him to the doctor for a really good checkup, and look for things like thyroid problems, long COVID and major depression, then ask professionals for their advice.
OP here - thanks for your concern - I get where you are coming from and appreciate your thoughts. But DS absolutely wants to go to college.
This is me you responded. As long as he seems OK with college and generally OK, then there are no worries.
The big concern is about the kid quietly suffering from severe anxiety, major depression or horror that he’s locked into a bad path.
If a happy kid is just a minimalist about moving in, that’s probably more of a good thing than a bad thing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP - here. Thanks for all the helpful comments. But, some of you...yikes.
Sorry woman, you raised a dud of a son.
OP here - good luck to you and your family. I can't imagine being so certain of a damning judgement of another person (well, I guess it's two people) that you essentially know nothing about other than a few online posts that gave minimal tidbits of information. But you do you.
+1
PP is rotten to the core, OP. Ignore that noise.