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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

DS hating UK uni and feeling guilty for encouraging him to go

241 replies

Dailyster · 29/09/2025 20:00

Hi everyone,

I am feeling really worried tonight and would love some perspective from people who have been through this. DS (18) has just started university in the UK and he is already saying he hates it. We lived in the UK until he was 3, then moved back to Russia. DH is British (from the South) and we always spoke English at home, so DS has grown up bilingual. When it came to applying for uni we really encouraged him to go back to the UK as we thought it would give him more opportunities, improve his career prospects and give him a chance to experience life in the country where he was born.

He was excited during the whole application process, worked hard on his A levels here and on his UCAS application, got a great offer and was thrilled when he got it. We visited in the spring and it all seemed perfect.

But now he is two weeks in and he sounds completely miserable. Every time we speak he just sounds flat and sad. He says his flatmates are friendly enough but he struggles to join in with them. They go out drinking and clubbing most nights and he is not really into that. He has gone out a couple of times but said he just felt awkward and left early.

He also says the accents are very hard to follow. He is in the North and although his English is good, he grew up hearing southern English from DH and his family and the northern accents plus slang are sometimes too fast for him. He feels embarrassed asking people to repeat themselves and just smiles along even when he does not fully understand. He told me that a couple of his flatmates sometimes laugh when he says certain words slightly differently and imitate him in a “jokey” way, which is making him feel self-conscious about speaking at all. He said he knows they do not mean to be cruel but it makes him want to stay in his room even more.

Academically he is finding it a shock too. The course is more theoretical than he expected, with long lectures and reading lists, and he said he struggles to keep up because he is translating things in his head all the time. He has joined a couple of societies but said he feels awkward turning up on his own and that everyone seems to already know each other.

He has already started saying he wants to come home and apply to a uni here next year. I have told him that it is normal to feel out of place at the start and that he should at least give it until Christmas before deciding. But I am starting to wonder if I am just making him suffer because I think it is “good for him” to stick it out. I feel so guilty because I really encouraged this whole idea and told him how amazing it would be. Now I am not sure if I have set him up for a horrible experience.

Has anyone had a DC who hated it at first but then found their feet later on? Or has anyone let their DC leave and come home? I want him to be happy but I also do not want him to miss out on what could be a great experience if he can just get through this first difficult term. Any advice or similar experiences would be very welcome.

OP posts:
JNicholson · 29/09/2025 20:07

I’m sorry. Re the drinking and clubbing thing, if he’s not into that, could he look out for e.g. Christian or Muslim society events that won’t be centred around drinking? Or any of the international social societies that might be less wedded to that than the Brits? My sense was that because of the growing Muslim population in Britain British unis had actually got a bit better at realising they need to provide some social events that aren’t focused around drinking, and he might be more likely to meet like-minded people there. Is there a Russian society? Can he go and hang out with people studying Russian literature? It sounds like he needs to cast his social net a bit wider than his flatmates (not that I think he should give up on them either).

JNicholson · 29/09/2025 20:10

Also, if he’s somewhere in the north near nice countryside, could he join a hiking society and get out at the weekends with them? If he’s near eg the Lake District or the Peak District it might help him to get the most out of being in the north of England, and also maybe easier to talk to new people when you’re doing an activity together and both looking forwards rather than staring at each other over a table, if he’s shy.

SheherazadesSpringNonsense · 29/09/2025 20:12

It’s very early days. Lots of people take a bit of time to find their feet, and it can take a while to find your people. Agree with previous posters - can you encourage him to join some societies that are doing something he might be interested in?

Chickenhorse · 29/09/2025 20:13

Is he at Lancaster Uni OP.

HereAreYourOptions · 29/09/2025 20:16

DS struggled at first. His flatmates were very different to him in terms of background and attitudes and not particularly nice because of it and he ended up moving to a different block. I was really stressed about it for the first few weeks. He didn’t really click with the new flatmates, but they were much nicer at least.

It was through the various societies he joined that he met friends and the people he ended up living with in years two and three and I think that, while it wasn’t the amazing experience I had at Uni and which I had hoped he would have too, he did enjoy his time there and still keeps in touch with the people he met.

I really hope everything works out for your son too - I can definitely empathise with how you are feeling right now.

Skybluepinky · 29/09/2025 20:19

Sounds like you are wasting your money he hates it, and doesn’t fit in, strange that he didn’t research the course before applying, as most that are eager to go know the ins and out before starting.

aperollingintotheweekend · 29/09/2025 20:19

Could he join an international students group perhaps?

HydroWIndWater · 29/09/2025 20:22

It is very early days

He can socialise, but he can drink soft drinks or alcohol free drinks

Or find some other groups to join at uni

HydroWIndWater · 29/09/2025 20:22

It is very early days

He can socialise, but he can drink soft drinks or alcohol free drinks

Or find some other groups to join at uni

Ritasueandbobtoo9 · 29/09/2025 20:23

It must be really tough. Honestly I feel life is too short to struggle through.

TheCurious0range · 29/09/2025 20:23

Which university is it? People might be able to suggest societies etc he might enjoy. I lived with an international student at Durham, she was pretty social but also in the Christian union and international students society I went along to solve it the rents with get and they were good and not focussed on drinking. She also did some modules in her mother tongue to boost her grade!

MrsTerryPratchett · 29/09/2025 20:25

Culture shock is very very hard. Typically people have a honeymoon period, then they sink like a stone into feeling sad, lonely, isolated and ‘foreign’. Then slowly acclimatise and feel better. This can take up to two years. The first year is normally the hardest.

It is best to try to tough it out, and use some proven culture shock tactics to feel better. However, these are mostly for people that chose it for themselves and it sounds as though he was pushed a bit too much. Accents in the North are very very difficult for the Southern English, never mind someone who is essentially ESL.

And some people simply don’t like moving countries. It’s genetic and hardwired. He may not.

Namechange1345677 · 29/09/2025 20:25

If he hates it I'd let him come home.

LemondrizzleShark · 29/09/2025 20:27

OP he must only be about two weeks in! Nobody has really made friends or settled in until at least Christmas. It is harder because he can’t just pop home for the weekend for some TLC, and you can’t nip over.

Keep talking to him, and encourage him to stick it out for a bit longer. Christmas sounds like a good idea. Would any of his UK course credits carry over in Russia?

ThatLemonJoker · 29/09/2025 20:27

Many students will feel a bit like him: out of place; like they've landed with people who aren't quite their type. This is reasonably easily solved by casting the net wider or getting involved with societies. As for the northern accents, many southern students get caught out by this! My friend's Londoner DC went to university in the north-east and she couldn't understand the locals at first, but she got the hang of it very quickly.

I would be slightly more concerned about the language issues in relation to his course though. Was he educated in English at all? Or only Russian? There is a big difference between speaking a language in a family setting and tackling a subject in academic English, both spoken and written. He may need extra support with the language and this might be something the university can advise on.

ReignOfError · 29/09/2025 20:35

I don’t know anyone - me included - who went to university abroad and liked it from the beginning. I know some people who were unhappy for their entire first year, and I loathed everything about my first semester (about 4 long months). As a PP said culture shock is hard, and homesickness is common. It must be doubly hard when it’s his first time living away from home.

But I would encourage him to stick it out for longer, certainly to Christmas, and to explore new ways of finding friends, because in my experience, it does get easier.

turkeyboots · 29/09/2025 20:35

British universities are socially tricky for non-Brits. Youth culture is different, educational backgrounds are different and it just can be too much. And I assume there are no other Russian students with visa restrictions, and few friendly Eastern European groups. Hes in a tough spot unless he has sport or something social to join.
I assume you want him out of Russia to avoid conscription? Would a English language course in Europe be an option?

DrinkFeckArseBrick · 29/09/2025 20:37

How long have you paid until? I'd be saying of course he can come home if he hates it but a few weeks isn't enough time to have given it a proper chance. Even people who absolutely loved their uni experience often struggled in the first few weeks. There are loads of students now who dont do drinking or won't be local ,he just needs to find them. And even if he doesn't end up sticking with the course, spending time with people his own age who speak English may really help him in the future (what's he going to do if he gets a job where he has to use English and they have an accent). He needs to be sure its really not for him before he comes back

herbalteabag · 29/09/2025 20:37

I think it would be worth him trying for a bit longer, as two weeks is nothing and there may be many people there who he would really get on with. Perhaps he could try out some clubs or societies that he is interested in. Once he has made some friends outside his flat then he might enjoy it a lot more, particularly if he can meet some international students.
Is there any possibility of changing accommodation?
As for the course itself, I would go and talk to his tutor about any issues he is having with translation.

Branster · 29/09/2025 20:42

It's only been 2 weeks. Set a deadline to say February-March next year. If he doesn't find his tribe by then and settles in, then he can come back. Or transfer to a different university?
If I were you, I'd visit him in the UK over Christmas. Not him coming home but you going there to him. And maybe have a few days travelling to Scotland or London.
Maybe he could do some English language classes one to one, where he just chats with the teacher to get used to the accents and colloquialisms. Not an actual classroom. Just a hour a couple of times a week, maybe the teacher could take him out and about that sort of thing.
I second looking for international students societies or groups. Not necessarily a Russian only group. But I expect a lot of them might be feeling a bit out of place, like him, now at the start of the course.
I would say one thing, the humour in the UK is rather specific. It's not meant in the literal sense, it is not meant to upset or embarrass. It is banter. But it's something he would get used to by understanding the local habits a bit more. And this takes a bit of time.

gmgnts · 29/09/2025 20:43

There will be a student counselling service, and they will be used to helping students who find settling in difficult - could you encourage him to contact them?

Neemie · 29/09/2025 20:45

He could get an online English tutor to help him with academic English. As for the social side, it is really early days. He could try some clubs to meet a wider variety of people.

Furgal · 29/09/2025 20:49

He might be able to ask to move to another flat. Dd has a friend who opted for a quiet flat and another one who chose a non drinking one. I moved myself in my first term as my flat mates had all known each other previously.

FutureMarchionessOfVidal · 29/09/2025 20:50

So much good advice above but I just wanted to say that I was a student who dropped out after the first term & restarted elsewhere next year. So coincidentally were two of my friends (I didn’t know them then). It may well be that your son can push through (it is early days) but if he does take a year out & restart it is absolutely not the end of the world! People do it; it is not a sign of weakness, just an aspect of growing up.
I hope things go better for him- it must be so distressing for you.

Bufftailed · 29/09/2025 20:55

I’d say 2-3 weeks more if he really hates it. It’s not ideal but maybe it is the wrong environment, wrong course etc.