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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Uni first week

52 replies

FairviewRosiev2 · 14/09/2024 21:29

Anyone else in bits

OP posts:
Fizbosshoes · 15/09/2024 09:22

Dropped DD for her first year on Friday, left her in tears, it was horrible. She has social anxiety and it took her 2 hours to put any food in the kitchen (despite much nagging from DH) because she could hear that her flatmates were in there.

It feels really quiet without her in the house, despite the fact she's probably the quietest one here anyway! I'm hoping once freshers week starts and if she joins in any activities things will be easier for her
....and me, if I know she's enjoying it!

GetDownkeith · 15/09/2024 10:24

PolaroidPrincess · 15/09/2024 09:16

If I can give you one piece of advice it's to try and hold on to that crying do that it's not in front of DC2. If they're at all anxious like DC1 it might influence the decisions they make about their education or give them guilt about the choices they do make Flowers

I haven’t cried in front of any of them apart from dad and she started me off and she is older than her brothers.
I will be just as upset in a couple of years when ds2 goes but less worried. He’s a different character entirely.
but thanks yes you’re absolutely right an is definitely something to remember.

MimiGC · 15/09/2024 10:54

I cried at the moment I left my son at his university accommodation, and cut the parting short, as I didn't want to embarrass him in front of everybody. I cried whilst I was driving away, but that was it. The moment of parting itself was painful, but I don't actually feel sad about him going and being away. It feels right, it's the normal order of things, I'm totally at peace with it.

Hoppinggreen · 15/09/2024 10:57

Dropping DD off next Friday so I will be in pieces the week after that BUT I will make sure that while DD knows we will miss her I don't want her to feel anything other than excitement

drivinmecrazy · 15/09/2024 11:05

I slept in DD2 bed for three nights and cried myself to sleep.
Now she's due to go back for year 2.
Feel the same.
But I know it will pass.
Looking forward to cooking food with a bit of spice and getting an empty house during the day.

I've also just been diagnosed with breast cancer so I'm happy for her that she's going to be away from it all for a while.

She's my second to go, DD1 graduated two years ago and she's still living at home.

They never go far or for too long.

It's ok to feel bereft, it's fine to feel sad.

You wouldn't be a mum if you didn't feel it Flowers

PolaroidPrincess · 15/09/2024 11:08

Last year there was a thread in the Higher Education Section for MNers whose DC started Uni in 2023 and it's still running.

If there isn't one already, it might be worth setting one up as I've found it useful for support and asking those silly questions that can spring to mind Wink

PolaroidPrincess · 15/09/2024 11:09

I'm sorry to here about your Cancer @drivinmecrazy Flowers

MermaidEyes · 15/09/2024 11:10

Fizbosshoes · 15/09/2024 09:22

Dropped DD for her first year on Friday, left her in tears, it was horrible. She has social anxiety and it took her 2 hours to put any food in the kitchen (despite much nagging from DH) because she could hear that her flatmates were in there.

It feels really quiet without her in the house, despite the fact she's probably the quietest one here anyway! I'm hoping once freshers week starts and if she joins in any activities things will be easier for her
....and me, if I know she's enjoying it!

Edited

I have one like this, and honestly, in the last year she's changed and grown and become independent in a way we never expected. She just made her mind up she was going to do stuff no matter how difficult it seemed, and the more she does, the more she realises sometimes it's not actually that bad, and there's always other people just like her. She's heading back for second year soon and she can't wait, she misses her uni town.
Good luck to your daughter!

PolaroidPrincess · 15/09/2024 11:10

PolaroidPrincess · 15/09/2024 11:08

Last year there was a thread in the Higher Education Section for MNers whose DC started Uni in 2023 and it's still running.

If there isn't one already, it might be worth setting one up as I've found it useful for support and asking those silly questions that can spring to mind Wink

Ah just seen there one already Wink

JMSA · 15/09/2024 11:13

drivinmecrazy · 15/09/2024 11:05

I slept in DD2 bed for three nights and cried myself to sleep.
Now she's due to go back for year 2.
Feel the same.
But I know it will pass.
Looking forward to cooking food with a bit of spice and getting an empty house during the day.

I've also just been diagnosed with breast cancer so I'm happy for her that she's going to be away from it all for a while.

She's my second to go, DD1 graduated two years ago and she's still living at home.

They never go far or for too long.

It's ok to feel bereft, it's fine to feel sad.

You wouldn't be a mum if you didn't feel it Flowers

Very, very best wishes Flowers

JMSA · 15/09/2024 11:15

Wow I'm not surprised your teen isn't happy at home. I bet he's over the moon to be away from you!

That's really not fair.

HelpMeGetThrough · 15/09/2024 11:21

Dropped the eldest back for his third year yesterday. 6 hour drive, unloaded all his stuff, stayed for about an hour and drove home again.

He had arranged to go to the pub, so there wasn't anything for us to do.

Long day though and a fair few hundred miles driven.

Fizbosshoes · 15/09/2024 11:21

MermaidEyes · 15/09/2024 11:10

I have one like this, and honestly, in the last year she's changed and grown and become independent in a way we never expected. She just made her mind up she was going to do stuff no matter how difficult it seemed, and the more she does, the more she realises sometimes it's not actually that bad, and there's always other people just like her. She's heading back for second year soon and she can't wait, she misses her uni town.
Good luck to your daughter!

Thank you so much for this reply, I just cried ! Blush
DD has plans for 2 clubs she wanted to join, which I think will really help, i just hope she'll be brave enough to go.
She bought some new noise cancelling headphones because she thought freshers week would be noisy....which made me a bit worried that she's not planning to be where the noise is coming from IYSWIM!
But I'm hopeful she'll find friends and be more independent (she has a lovely group of friends from school already so I know she can do it)

mondaytosunday · 15/09/2024 11:24

@PolaroidPrincess there are several.
My youngest goes in a couple weeks. Our family dog, that we've had for 15 years, will most likely be put down this week.
So full of emotions but really I'm more excited for her than sad for me! It will be a big adjustment but I had a taste earlier this year when she went abroad for a month for work experience. Shared a room and the flat had 15 total (it was part of her Art Foundation course). The didn't miss her as much as I expected but it was only a month. But it was good for both of us - a taster if you will for her and she had to cope with a lot, getting around a new city without speaking the language. I think she realised how much she can do. Also, a year more mature and more realistic idea of what living away will be like.
Anyway I'm sure there will be tears. But she'll be back in 11 short weeks. She'll miss out on our annual Christmas tree trip - which seems to be more of a big deal for me than her! We do plan on watching Bake Off together over the internet!

heartsinvisiblefury · 15/09/2024 11:37

Yes . I am OP. My son is a shy introvert but chose to go to a busy big Northern city and to live in halls right in the centre and I am so worried. He isn't a drinker or a clubber and finds it really hard to make friends. I'm missing him like mad but worrying so much. I hate it.

PolaroidPrincess · 15/09/2024 12:16

That must be hard with the distance involved @HelpMeGetThrough, logistically too Flowers

PolaroidPrincess · 15/09/2024 12:18

heartsinvisiblefury · 15/09/2024 11:37

Yes . I am OP. My son is a shy introvert but chose to go to a busy big Northern city and to live in halls right in the centre and I am so worried. He isn't a drinker or a clubber and finds it really hard to make friends. I'm missing him like mad but worrying so much. I hate it.

Has he managed to go to any of the Fresher's events. Lots of them are aimed at students who don't want to drink and party.

NoShitHemlock · 15/09/2024 12:27

Not to sound overdramatic but I am devastated and putting on (or at least trying to put on) a brave face. It as always been just the 2 of us. DD has ASD and ADHD and has worked her arse off to get amazing grades and get into the University she wanted. She has listened to every thing I have tried to teach her (how to cook, how to use the washing machine, how to fold clothes etc) and is now ready to take her next step which is University in a different country, so on Wednesday we pack the car, get the overnight boat then drive for 3hrs and leave my baby (told you I was being dramatic!)

She actually said that she knows she will be ok because I have also taught her how to be independent and what a good job I have done. Pah - doesn't make any difference cos I just want her here. What if something happens, or she needs me? What about the 2am snuggles when she has had a hard day and just needs the extra comfort? What about the meltdowns when she is overwhelmed and can't self regulate? This is bloody awful. Sorry - I know everyone here is coping with all the same stuff and I am not helping anyone (least of all myself) but she has been literally the centre of my universe for 18yrs and I don't know what I am supposed to do now.

PolaroidPrincess · 15/09/2024 12:32

You can still support her @NoShitHemlock, it's just a little different. She will still need you in some ways and you'll still be there for her Flowers

MrsCarson · 15/09/2024 12:46

Mine is going into second year next Friday.
She did admit that she had bit of wobble and some tears when her brother and I drove off the first year. I was OK, I used to think she was in her room and would turn up downstairs then remember she's away.

GetDownkeith · 15/09/2024 12:49

MermaidEyes · 15/09/2024 11:10

I have one like this, and honestly, in the last year she's changed and grown and become independent in a way we never expected. She just made her mind up she was going to do stuff no matter how difficult it seemed, and the more she does, the more she realises sometimes it's not actually that bad, and there's always other people just like her. She's heading back for second year soon and she can't wait, she misses her uni town.
Good luck to your daughter!

This is just what I needed to read too. I keep telling myself he will be fine. I know how hard he finds it but he has chosen this and I’m sure it will feel a hit shit for him at first but hoping he flourishes like your dd has.

ssd · 15/09/2024 12:55

My local paper has printed this every year since 2006 at this time of year (back to uni time). It sums it up for me.

"I wasn't wrong about their leaving. My husband kept telling me I was. That it wasn't the end of the world when first one child, then another , and then the last packed their bags and left for college.

But it was the end of something. Can you pick me up, Mum?" What's for dinner?" ``What do you think?"

I was the sun and they were the planets. And there was life on those planets, whirling, non stop plans and parties and friends coming and going, and ideas and dreams and the phone ringing and doors slamming.

And I got to beam down on them. To watch. To glow.

And then they were gone, one after the other.

``They'll be back," my husband said. And he was right. They came back. But he was wrong, too, because they came back for intervals -- not for always, not planets anymore, making their predictable orbits, but unpredictable, like shooting stars.

Always is what you miss. Always knowing where they are. At school. At play practice. At a ballgame. At a friend's. Always looking at the clock mid day and anticipating the door opening, the sigh, the smile, the laugh, the shrug. How was school?" answered for years in too much detail. And then he said . . . and then I said to him. . . ." Then hardly answered at all.

Always, knowing his friends.

Her favourite show.

What he had for breakfast.

What she wore to school.

What he thinks.

How she feels.

My friend Beth's twin girls left for university yesterday. They are her fourth and fifth children. She's been down this road three times before. You'd think it would get easier.

``I don't know what I'm going to do without them," she has said every day for months.

And I have said nothing, because, really, what is there to say?

A chapter ends. Another chapter begins. One door closes and another door opens. The best thing a parent can give their child is wings. I read all these things when my children left home and thought then what I think now: What do these words mean?

Eighteen years isn't a chapter in anyone's life. It's a whole book, and that book is ending and what comes next is connected to, but different from, everything that has gone before.

Before was an infant, a toddler, a child, a teenager. Before was feeding and changing and teaching and comforting and guiding and disciplining, everything hands -on. Now?

Now the kids are young adults and on their own and the parents are on the periphery, and it's not just a chapter change. It's a sea change.

As for a door closing? Would that you could close a door and forget for even a minute your children and your love for them and your fear for them, too. And would that they occupied just a single room in your head. But they're in every room in your head and in your heart.

As for the wings analogy? It's sweet. But children are not birds. Parents don't let them go and build another nest and have all new offspring next year.

Saying goodbye to your children and their childhood is much harder than all the pithy sayings make it seem. Because that's what going to university is. It's goodbye.

It's not a death. And it's not a tragedy.

But it's not nothing, either.

To grow a child, a body changes. It needs more sleep. It rejects food it used to like. It expands and it adapts.

To let go of a child, a body changes, too. It sighs and it cries and it feels weightless and heavy at the same time.

The drive home alone without them is the worst. And the first few days. But then it gets better. The kids call, come home, bring their friends, fill the house with their energy again.

Life does go on.

Can you give me a ride to the mall?" Mum, make him stop!" I don't miss this part of parenting, playing chauffeur and referee. But I miss them, still, all these years later, the children they were, at the dinner table, beside me on the couch, talking on the phone, sleeping in their rooms, safe, home, mine."

HelpMeGetThrough · 15/09/2024 13:05

PolaroidPrincess · 15/09/2024 12:16

That must be hard with the distance involved @HelpMeGetThrough, logistically too Flowers

Weekly video calls keep us going and various text message with pictures of Central London at 4am, when he's crawling out of some pub or club 😁

Logistically, getting him to and from there is a bloody long day. It's a good job I like driving, 670 mile round trip in a day is not too bad. I'm used to driving long distances for my job.

People think we are mad doing it.

PolaroidPrincess · 15/09/2024 13:13

Doesn't matter what others think @HelpMeGetThrough, you're happy to do it and are capable and that's all that matters Wink

MermaidEyes · 15/09/2024 14:12

@Fizbosshoes @GetDownkeith 🤗

They will be absolutely fine. Most of my DDs school friends are the same and they have also settled and flourished in their own University cities. When my dd first started she spent a few weeks pubbing/clubbing/going to the student bar, but it's not really her thing, and she eventually found her people.
On her very first day she was sat there with a map feeling lost and extremely nervous. Suddenly, 5 or 6 people appeared saying can I have a look at your map, i have no idea where I'm going! So they all traipsed off together with her leading the way like a tour guide to find their rooms 😆 I think that moment brought home the fact that they're all in the same boat!