Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don’t withhold contact. Line up some therapy for the summer. She may need some extra support in finding her groove at college. My daughter had different issues than yours but needed a lot of time and contact. I’ve never regretted being there for her.
She had therapy which was not helpful. And to be clear it’s not like I don’t want to be there for her. I worry I am there for her in such a way it makes things worse bc sure I don’t want her to be lonely, but I also don’t want to be the reason she does not try to find other outlets. People say it will pass but I know several people in their 30s and even 40s who never became independent. We have majorly stepped back on advice bc she does not listen or then does but says it doesn’t work. There has been zero progress with our current way.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don’t withhold contact. Line up some therapy for the summer. She may need some extra support in finding her groove at college. My daughter had different issues than yours but needed a lot of time and contact. I’ve never regretted being there for her.
She had therapy which was not helpful. And to be clear it’s not like I don’t want to be there for her. I worry I am there for her in such a way it makes things worse bc sure I don’t want her to be lonely, but I also don’t want to be the reason she does not try to find other outlets. People say it will pass but I know several people in their 30s and even 40s who never became independent. We have majorly stepped back on advice bc she does not listen or then does but says it doesn’t work. There has been zero progress with our current way.
What does she say about it not working? A lot of people say they need to be pushed to go out, but when they do, they are glad they went. If that's not her, what exactly is she saying? That she didn't have a good time and doesn't want to go again, or that she liked it and wanted to make friends with the people but they didn't want to be friends? Does she want friends and relationships?
She does want friends but does not try to make friends and does not follow through so people think she’s not interested. Like the language group: she was invited to a bday party and a lunch and went to neither, then she claims she did not like them enough. We’ve had many talks about this. Earlier in the year I’d send her events all the time but she’d make excuses. She sits in her dorm on weekends or will go read or to a coffee shop alone. She has many people she could ask bc she does know people but she refuses to initiate plans.
Anonymous wrote:We have a close knit family. My adult DD will call frequently (even daily some periods) and we share lots of things. When she is going through a difficult time - new job, new place, new situations, unfamiliar people etc - I am there for her. When things are easy for her - I am there for her.
Kids go through periods where they do not have their tribe. And that is ok. Be there for your children at all times. God knows that your time is limited with them. As long as you are on the Earth - be their parent. Love them. It is a blessing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a feeling that your main worry is that you are “spoiling” her by providing emotional support? Well it’s not so. Give her what she needs now and she’ll move on once she gets enough of what she needs.
She does sound like some ASD kids I know so maybe you can line up an eval for her.
No, I just think I am enabling bad habits of endless ruminating over no friends while not actually trying to make friends and it will mean zero independence in the long run the way I see some other adults be which is so unhealthy.
No! You aren’t enabling anything. What you are doing is either inconsequential or actually helps her.
Please don’t worry about it. Talk to a therapist about it if you don’t believe me - modern child development theories support my POV.
Anonymous wrote:Just be busy sometimes. My parents frequently don't answer the phone. I guess it's possible they are avoiding me (if so they hide it well), but my impression is they are just busy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a feeling that your main worry is that you are “spoiling” her by providing emotional support? Well it’s not so. Give her what she needs now and she’ll move on once she gets enough of what she needs.
She does sound like some ASD kids I know so maybe you can line up an eval for her.
No, I just think I am enabling bad habits of endless ruminating over no friends while not actually trying to make friends and it will mean zero independence in the long run the way I see some other adults be which is so unhealthy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This makes me so sad. She is your child! Of course you talk with her and listen to her! You don’t tell her to call less.
This is also prime age for mental illnesses onset. Keep her close!
Omg I think people are thinking I don’t talk to her or ever want to talk to her. I am a very present mom. I don’t know if that’s a good thing or possibly impeding growth and independence.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Put her on FaceTime camera while you prep and eat dinner or watch same tv show together so you don't have to force conversation but can still provide comforting presence.
I just posted, but wanted to address this directly. I know you mean well, but if you called a close friend in emotional distress and they were distracted making dinner and doing other things, would you want to keep talking? Undivided attention shows you care, but the daughters needs sound like more than OP can handle which is why I suggest she work with a professional. It's not seeing OP that makes the daughter feel comfort. She wants to be heard and understood and experience empathy. Doing another task and not fully listening conveys that it just isn't important to the mom. It's like when you get together with a close friend and the person keeps checking her phone, but there's no emergency. It's rude. OP needs to figure out how to gently set boundaries while still conveying she truly cares.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, read your own comments. You are mostly repeating your complaints, ignoring advice, and talking about how you haven’t followed through with getting your daughter help. Do you see what I see?
Legal adults can't be forced to go to therapy, all you can do is suggest.