Anonymous wrote:I am not a helicopter parent and I am uninvolved. I don’t participate on these Facebook groups.
I have a lonely freshman in college. I feel
sad for him because in chatting with his roommate before school started, he was convinced that he would be good friends with his roommate. However, his roommate already had a group and friends. My son has no friends and has expressed sadness over it. I had a feeling this would happen, as he has social anxiety and comes across as not approachable. Completely different from his younger HS brother who already has friends at this same college and hangs out with them during visits.
I will always be there to offer emotional support for my son. I know how important it is to have a shoulder to lean on just to vent. I don’t get any emotional support from my own mother and it negatively impacts me. I will not do that to my son. Please have some empathy for these kids that have a hard time making friends.
I’m so sorry. My dd doesn’t have any friends . And she’s a junior. Longish story, but health problems caused chaos the first few years . She transferred because it was so miserable and she finally made some headway with her health. Not perfect, but she at least wants to socialize a bit. Now she has no friends at the new school.
A few observations- there is much more homogeneous/like for like groups than I expected. I was shocked that the groups still segregate by race/class/ethnicity to this degree. There are no open doors at all in dorms. We’ve been in 4 of them now. Not 1 open door. There are no people hanging in lounges or watching tv or playing ping pong. Once kids get their groups, they join clubs together and speak to each other. They also stack the club leadership with friends. I think kids are less observant and dont really pay attention to anything around them. My dd was outside crying at night and not 1 person asked if she was ok . The rec sports leagues (not club- just for fun) require already formed groups to join together as teams. These observations held at both a very large school and a midsize. Introverts and kids who don’t like to party, yet aren’t into d&d or similar have a very tough time. I was extremely shy , but people were always around and seemed to actually care /ask if I wanted to go along for dinner or whatever. She never even met her new RA until they came last week for inspection!!
Thanks for listening. I’m at a loss and will also continue to support my kid. I’m her only safe space and would never ever want her to feel even more alone!