Get the Best Family Activities
- Reassure your child as much as possible that they will do well and that college is a wonderful experience.
- When you drop your child off on campus this is not the time to insist on hugging, kissing or making a scene. Many kids aren't comfortable with public displays of affection, so writing a letter explaining how you feel about your child and leaving it somewhere where they can read it in private will be appreciated by them.
- Call your child or communicate with them in the same manner you did in high school, but let them set the pace.
- Plan a bi-monthly or monthly family meal where your child will come home and reunite. For families who live far away FaceTime or Skype are wonderful ways to reunite.
- Remind your child that you're near when they are concerned or worried, and that you have every confidence they can handle the situation.
Separation is part of life, and learning how to separate from the ones you love most is a lifetime lesson. If your child has difficulty, it will usually pass, but when in doubt, speaking to a counselor is always helpful. Reminding your child that mistakes are learning tools, and that we all make them, helps lessen their anxiety when they are trying to be perfect in their new surroundings. Most children I talk with tell me the one source of comfort their parents gave them that pulled them through many anxious transitions was knowing that they could always go home. Kids need to know their family will always be there no matter where home (geographically) is.
Mary Jo Rapini, MEd, LPC, is a licensed psychotherapist and co-author with Janine J. Sherman, of Start Talking: A Girl's Guide for You and Your Mom About Health, Sex or Whatever. Read more about the book at StartTalkingBook.com and more about Rapini at maryjorapini.com.