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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

About daughter getting into uni

178 replies

ComeTheRawPrawn · 14/08/2015 08:39

I need some perspective here.

Daughter (18) has been horrendous to live with this year, to the point where we nearly asked her to go and live with her Gran for a while because she made things so unpleasant. Drinking, sleeping around, lying, spending our money on things we didn't want her to, getting sacked from part time job, refusing to attend 6th form. It's been a bad few months with her. We had daily phone calls from teachers stressing out about her lack of coursework and missed deadlines. It reached the point where, as much as I still love her, at the minute I don't really like her, nor do I trust her, due to the lying and money issues.

Results day came yesterday and she got poor grades compared to the requirements for uni. They wanted AAB and she got BDD. I thought this was a fair result considering she didn't crack a textbook open since Christmas. The uni have accepted her anyway!

I feel like she's learnt nothing from all the trouble she gave us, I feel very much that she doesn't deserve this place.

She wants to go to uni again now. My first concern is that she's shown such little academic commitment this year that she'll struggle with the independent learning of uni but accept that she will find out the hard way.

My other concern is that, having lost her part time job, the loan/grant she will get will by swallowed up by halls fees and she'll have nothing left to live on. She won't get another job easily, having been sacked. She didn't apply for halls or loans because she gave up on the idea of uni so of course all the cheapest halls will be taken. Her loan might not even cover all her rent now. She's expecting to go and for us to 'top her up' until she finds a job. I really begrudge this. In order for us to do this, we'd have to cut back to severe basics, our budget is tight as it is. My partner would have to do loads overtime just to keep our basic bills paid. I don't want us to do this for her after the things she's done this year. She's still not at all apologetic about any of it.

Aibu to say that she can't go this year and needs to defer a year? Next year, she'll get a better loan anyway, she can use this year to save up too, when she eventually finds a job. We could afford for her to live here & continue to feed her, and hopefully her lack of spends would motivate her to get a new job.

OP posts:
MrsCs · 14/08/2015 21:19

Actually Madam I think it's more evidence of love when parents don't take the excuse all, there there attitude. You can certainly tell the adults who have been raised this way. A rude and unhelpful response for OP who has clearly had a tough time.

Being a teenager is not a good reason to opt out of education, steal and abuse those around you. Being taught a lesson now may be important.

I totally agree with letting her sort it out herself, whether it be deferring or her getting a job to allow her to go to uni.

YeOldeTrout · 14/08/2015 21:38

tbh, I would probably want to make the financial sacrifice to have the privilege of seeing the back of Her Stroppiness at least for a while and want her to go now to Uni. But I understand OP's reasons, too.

MadamArcatiAgain · 14/08/2015 22:14

Who has responded rudely to the OP?

I very much doubt that the Uni will defer when they may be able to fill the course with ABBs next year.

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