Letting
Go and Staying Connected
A Guide
for Parents*
University Counseling Center
201 Dempsey Hall
University of Wisconsin Oshkosh
Oshkosh, WI 54901
920-424-2061
8:00AM - 4:30PM Daily
"Parents
have to decide if they can let go and live with the choices their
children are going to make. College isn't about what parents expect
- it's about what their son or daughter expects."
Jonathan
D. Lewis, senior psychologist
University of Delaware Center for Counseling and Student Development
Introduction
Readiness for Transition
Their First Weeks on
Campus
What if I Didn't Go to
College?
Cultivating Support
for Parents
Being a Parent Changes
at Every Stage
Additional Tips
Introduction
The
following information is for parents* whose students are
thinking about college, are starting college soon, are changing
their mind (again) about college or are in their first year of
college. It is common to focus on your son or daughter's needs
during the transition to college. What about your needs, worries
and questions? Their departure, whether your first, second or
fifth child leaving home, is also a transition for you. You are
still a parent. Your job is not done but your role will change.
This brochure addresses what to expect.
______________________________
*
By "parent" we are referring to caretakers including
grandparents, an older brother or sister who has been a caretaker,
adoptive and/or step parents, legal guardians and anyone who raised
and nurtured the student starting college.
Readiness
for the Transition
The
months and days before your son or daughter departs for college
is not an easy time for you. If your first son or daughter is
going to college the transition represents a change that you haven't
dealt with before. You aren't sure what to expect of them or of
you. If you have been through this you may feel more confident
but also nostalgic. Saying goodbye is never easy. In the book
"Letting Go," Coburn and Treeger, (1992) present two
viewpoints of a son or daughter's departure. The college student
says: "Leave me alone. Stop reminding me that I am growing
up and leaving" while the parent says: "I'm not so sure
you're ready to leave. I'm not so sure you can make it without
me" (p.99). The different perspectives sometimes lead to
difficulties in understanding where the other is coming from.
There is no right time for a parent to let go. It has been and
will continue to be an ongoing process. All of the preparatory
work has already occurred. It is time now for your son or daughter
to take the next step.
But
you still wonder, "Are they ready?" You know your son
or daughter best, and ultimately you are the only one (other than
your son or daughter) who can answer that question. Some students
don't seem to be ready, but they will thrive at college. On the
other extreme some who seem quite mature have a difficult time
making the adjustment. It is most likely that your son or daughter
is ready in some ways and unsure in other ways.
This
transition is a balancing act. Here are some issues in which you
might want to be aware:
let
go and be present enough to be responsive.
allow
them to assume responsibility for their life while you provide
a safety net.
have set the stage for your changing relationship over the last
eighteen years.
They:
want to be left alone but not abandoned.
want you to
be there but may not be responsive to your needs or worries.
may want to
test or defy your values but not incur your anger.
Recommendations:
Expect some raw and mixed emotions (excitement, pride, guilt,
sadness) Recognize that these feelings are normal.
Allow yourself
to feel the emotions that come up. Don't minimize them.
Be consistent
and reassuring. Step back but be there for them.
Recognize
that the responsibility of getting ready for college, in large
part rests with your son or daughter.
Temper reactions
to room assignments, meal decisions and other specifics that are
part of the plans.
Keep discussion
ongoing. Talk about how your son or daughter will keep in touch.
Discuss financial
matters with your son and daughter and be realistic.
Something besides
fear of displeasing you must motivate your son or daughter. Make
room for new motivations.
Above all
else, keep communication open.
Their
First Weeks on Campus
Once
they leave, your worry kicks in big time! Parents may experience
a sense of helplessness because they don't know what is going
on with their son or daughter. The best you can do is to expect
and accept those feelings of helplessness. It is not a passive
position. (You are actively turning over the reins of responsibility
to your son or daughter.)
Young people between the ages of 17-22 are facing one of the biggest
developmental hurdles in their lives. "When adults later
consider the most important events in their lives, they most often
name events that took place during this period" (Arnett,
2000).1 That's because your son or daughter will learn to assume
the responsibility for his or her own life. That's it, that's
exactly what you worry about isn't it? Will they do their laundry?
Will they only eat pizza, or salad, or potato chips? What kind
of decisions will they make for themselves? What about sex and
drugs?
In
the first weeks and months of college, young adults typically
have one foot in, and one foot out of their home. They want you
to take care of them and they want you to let them do it themselves.
Knowing which is when and how you can be helpful fluctuates constantly.
That's where your patience comes in. There are no right or wrong
answers and no specific how-to manual.
Recommendations:
Let your son
or daughter know you are there for them if they need help
Be there for
them when they call.
Recognize that
distress one night may be forgotten by the weekend.
Recognize your
son or daughter may make mistakes and those mistakes are part of
their growth. You can't and don't want to prevent that process.
You do want to cushion the pain if possible.
Consider set
times for weekly phone calls.
Students find
e-mail a convenient way to stay in touch and you can think about
your response before you reply.
Manage your
worry. It doesn't help students to become autonomous if they feel
they need to do something so you don't worry.
Expect your
son or daughter to be disoriented during the first few days.
"What
if I didn't go to College?"
It
is hard to be equipped for an adventure when you haven't gone through
it yourself but that is part of your growth. Sending a son or daughter
to college opens a world of opportunities for them. No doubt you
are proud of your son or daughter. If you didn't go to college,
they will have an opportunity that you didn't have. Some students
feel guilty for having an opportunity that you haven't had. Some
believe they don't deserve to go to college, don't need it or don't
even want it. They may have very mixed feelings about attending
college. Recognize that college may not be a good fit for them now
and regardless of the way they are feeling, encourage them to form
connections at UW Oshkosh so they don't feel alone. Remind them
about their residence hall community advisor as a resource for connections
on campus. If they live off campus, have them look into student
organizations at the Dean of Students Office or the Student Union.
Remember, there are no simple answers to getting involved and feeling
connected on campus, so above all be a good listener and let them
know that you care. Sometimes, the best thing a parent can do is
just let their son or daughter vent and trust that they will come
up with solutions on their own.
Recommendations:
You will probably
hear some stories about college life that alarm you. Telling these
stories may be a way for your son or daughter to learn to master
their fears about going to college.
Cope with the
feeling of not knowing how things work by being prepared with information
on campus resources. Call people on campus and ask questions.
Students get
discouraged and tired. Know that they may become disheartened and
be prepared to support and encourage them. Students want to know
you will be candid with them.
Some students
get homesick. Homesickness often subsides after the first few weeks.
Ironically, staying on campus is likely to help the student make
friends and feel more comfortable, more quickly.
Cultivating
Support
Your
son and daughter is making new friends and facing new opportunities.
You too benefit from a support system of family and friends. You
are used to the role of mother/father and letting go may be more
difficult than you anticipate. Talk to other parents, take advantage
of university sponsored orientation programs, talk to parents from
your hometown and exchange phone numbers. As a parent, it is reassuring
to realize other parents feel the same way.
Recommendations:
Find a creative
outlet for yourself.
Make new friends.
Make wellness
a goal for you about improving diet, sleep and exercise.
Go to orientation.
Be familiar with campus resources.
Expect sibling
relationships to shift.
Being
a Parent Changes at Every Stage
"In
order for parents to enjoy an adult relationship with their grown
children, it is important to remain connected throughout the letting
go process. With infants, it means responding to their needs promptly.
With toddlers, it means letting them try, allowing them to fail,
and showing them how to do things over and over again. With school
children, it means letting them participate and being there to watch
and support them. With teens, it means allowing them to make choices
within safe limits and allowing them to experience the consequences
of their choices while offering support."2
What
does being a parent mean with young adults?
Balancing their need to be taken care of with their need to call
the shots?
Giving your blessing?
Sharing each other's journey?
Saying I love you and I am proud of you?
.Additional
Tips
Do's
Attend Fall
Fest (third weekend in September) with your son or daughter.
Visit at infrequent
prearranged times.
Encourage them
to make connections on campus, especially on the weekends, so they
become a part of the college community.
Ask open-ended
questions.
Become a friend
and support.
Realize that
your son or daughter is growing up in a world different than your
own. Your role is to come to understand that world and appreciate
it through your son or daughter's eyes.
Send care packages
with cookies, treats, etc.
Be realistic
about academic success. College can be much harder than high school
for some students. Remember students are learning more than a subject.
They are learning to work independently, set their own schedules
and focus by their own volition.
Ask for help
proactively if you believe your son or daughter is in distress.
Don't
give away
their room initially and until you talk it through
visit unannounced
References
1
Arnett, J. (May, 2000). "Emerging adulthood: A theory of development
from the late teens through the twenties." American Psychologist.
55(35), 469-479.)
2
Ohio State University Extension Fact Sheet: Family and Consumer
Science. 'Parenting Means Letting Go,' Marilyn A. Sachs.
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