Anonymous wrote:Military will straighten them out.
Anonymous wrote:Military will straighten them out.
Anonymous wrote:I have a daughter who is 21. She left a good college after one year because she was overwhelmed and could not keep up. She has always done things half assed, and barely gets by. Since leaving college 18 months ago, she has gone to community college and done average there, work a job at a coffee shop and that’s pretty much it. Nothing else. She is sweet and cute but has no friends because it’s hard to meet people. She did have a boyfriend, but they just broke up so now she truly has no one. But she doesn’t try either. She just never seems to do anything that makes me proud. The best thing she does is take out the trash and empty the dishwasher without being asked. I feel that age 21 she should be doing a bit more. I was just out with my friend who says, well she’s doing the minimum of staying out of trouble working and going to school. And she doesn’t do drugs or alcohol and isn’t a problem. I just don’t see much adulting going on and I’m a little worried that this is going to be her whole story in life. I just can’t say I’m proud of her, like my other daughter who works really hard and is outgoing and tries to meet people. Am I being impatient? Does anyone have any advice? She is only 21, but both me and my partner say how we just don’t see change since she left school.
Anonymous wrote:You're lucky she's not a deadbeat.
If she's responsible, ask her to take on more chores to help her prepare for solo living.
Did she like the college and fail out? Or was she unhappy and left?
I don't think today's society does a great job at helping people figure out what is meaningful in life.
Remember that for most of human history, your daughter's role would have been wife, mother, homemaker. However you feel about that, those roles are more intuitive than a modern career path.
Anonymous wrote:She has ADD and she's only 21. I think you should find yourself a good therapist and leave her alone until you can learn how to be supportive and loving without conditions and judgment.
Anonymous wrote:If you are not proud of your child think of the behavior you modeled to them growing up. They are a reflection of how you raised them.
Anonymous wrote:If you are not proud of your child think of the behavior you modeled to them growing up. They are a reflection of how you raised them.
Anonymous wrote:If you are not proud of your child think of the behavior you modeled to them growing up. They are a reflection of how you raised them.
Anonymous wrote:If you are not proud of your child think of the behavior you modeled to them growing up. They are a reflection of how you raised them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ugh your mentality is garbage. Her job in life is not to make you proud. Just love her, support, and encourage her the best you can.
No. You are wrong. Whether or not we admit it publicly, that is our kids’ jobs. My immigrant family would agree with that.
Op here. A lot of feedback… No it’s not her job to make me proud, I’m not asking her to become a doctor! Just show some initiative for anything!
I’m just asking, if you kid age 21 dropped out of college, barely scrapes by community college part time, works a job part time and has zero other interests other than TikTok in spare time, are you supposed to tell her you’re *proud* of her?
And to answer a couple other questions,
I just said partner, but yes, he’s my husband.
My other child launched just fine.
To be honest, it’s kinda hard to tell how she did in high school. She was doing great up until Covid in the middle of grade 10, then yes she got good grades, but everyone did and the bar was quite low to get an A and she had grade inflation for sure. She blew off a lot of stuff but still seem to manage to do fine. She did get a 1300 on her SATs so there is intelligence there.
Yes she has Add and is medicated. She’s responsible her medications.