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DD forced to take break from uni and cannot find a job

39 replies

Potterymama11 · 09/03/2026 08:05

DD19 now started her degree sept 2024. Due to achieving a C instead of a B in one subject , uni said she could still study dream course but with different joint honours and different campus . Now this campus is 6hrs from us and is in rural west county , headteacher on results day begged her not to go that far but DD was set on this uni and course .

Cracks started to show when I picked her up for the summer to return to home town. When packing up her first year room , I realised she was throwing away photos of her and her uni friends in the bin and she said she’d explain later . In the summer , she had to resit one of her modules that she failed in the winter . I was encouraging her everyday to get started on the resit assignment, and she reassured me telling me she had started and would proactively update me on her progress . We ended the summer thinking she had submitted her assignment and all was well and that she’d return to second year in sept 25.

Early September on the resit results day , she receives a 0 . We ask her what’s going on , and she divulges that she had written up the assignment but submitted it 23hrs after the deadline ,and her uni have a strict lateness policy with resit assignment . So she had failed her resit attempt because of lateness not the quality of her work . The uni then wrote to her saying , because she studies law and had failed a core module it would bar her from ever becoming a barrister and it would be difficult to become a solicitor . These are the rules set by the regulation body for lawyers . They said she could continue into second year as intended or take a year off and resit this module , this is called a year without attendance , where she can stay at home and do the assignment again.

i was abit concerned as to how she managed to submit so late and get herself in this pickle . She said the whole summer she’d been dealing with the bullying she faced after falling out with a friend at uni , that she spoke to nobody on her course or in her flat for about 4 months . She had an on and off boyfriend since she was 17 and they broke up before she started uni , she told me that in the winter when she first did this assignment he was staying with her , and she went thru his found and found some nasty things , so was crying whilst writing the first ever attempt and they kept arguing. This was also her first sexual partner so I assume she was quite beaten down by this fallout . In an attempt to move on , she was seeing a classmate and was unwantedly touched by him , later she encountered racism incidents with locals . and had struggled with a binge disorder because of how isolated she was and was affected heavily by all of this . She couldn’t leave the house without having flashbacks she said , even walking by the trees or in the park would set off a visceral flashback to her uni campus that was built in a Forrest, where she’d walk to lectures alone and lonely . she would wake up at home and think she was in her uni bedroom and start becoming emotional . She was still 18 at this point but it was like taking care of a young child all over again , she was so broken and traumatised by what had happened . She was in extreme isolation for a long period of time and we never came to visit because she insisted we didn’t at the time . We explored filing a student misconduct case against these students , and she wrote the report but felt that it would burden her too much to pursuit the case as she was already dealing with a lot .

She said the night before she had to submit her resit , she was throwing up and this was because she had overeaten because of the disorder . So she was very weak and couldn’t write well … we explored getting her into a new uni where her bestfriend from secondary school is , they offered her a place but said she would have to join as a year 1 not year 2 despite studying the exact same modules . So she rejected it

Shes decided to do the year off and resit the module , she has been at home with us since September and successfully resat the module . This hasn’t been easy at all , I have had to work from home , she struggles to get out of bed and take care of herself . Getting in the shower is a struggle , wearing clean clothes etc . I had to return to work and I’d have to call every hour to make sure she was okay . We wanted to make a referral to the gp mental health but this has been not been done yet because she has improved since .

she has been looking for work , volunteering, anything. She had an unpaid role but the boss was horrible to her she would come home and have these episodes of emotional flashbacks where she would feel small and just awful . It really knocked her confidence but she left and has managed to volunteer with a very good organisation that she will be able to continue with once she returns in September to uni .

I decided to put her on universal credit because I could not be giving her pocket money and neither could her dad . She has applied to hundreds of retail , hospitality, cleaning even agency jobs and 0 responses. And I honestly do not know how to help her, she said job centre are not helpful but she continues to go. Permanent roles are tricky because she will need to leave by August to move back to uni , even part time roles are very difficult to get . I feel bad for checking in asking how her job searching is going, she uses alot of her time to improve her CV and look for roles . She Has improved with her self care alot , she now goes to the gym herself , goes walking everyday and I’m very pleased that she’s made progress on a personal level and this is what is making me okay with her not working .
It is a double edged sword because , being at home all the time, it gives her the time to improve but she also does slip back into those restrictive eating habits , unproductivity and dwelling on the things that happened . She told me she suspects she has autism and dyspraxia and is not sure how she will be supported when she gets back to uni .
just need to get this off my chest and I feel like I’m running out of ideas as to how I can support her with job search and wellbeing .

OP posts:
ViciousCurrentBun · 09/03/2026 12:55

She needs therapy more than anything else.

DS completed his degree apprenticeship last year it is extremely competitive.He had multiple interviews over a couple of months, tests traditional and psychometric. It was really gruelling. It made the traditional route through University look like a walk in the park. The workload is out of this world as well. I would say you have to be far more robust for this than any other learning experience.

Friendlygingercat · 09/03/2026 13:16

Law is a very tough and intense profession. If your DD cannot cope with uni then she may not have the resilliance necessary for that career. It sounds very much as though you were facilitating her failure to cope and get her priorities right. You need to both rethink your options.

allthingsinmoderation · 09/03/2026 13:19

This must be very difficult for your DD to experience and for you to see .
I think start with supporting your DD to get professional help with her mental health issues because all aspects of her life are affected by this.
Health first without that you have nothing and can do nothing.

KateBridgerton · 09/03/2026 13:21

This thread is so sad.

OP I'm in my late 30s and I absolutely hated my time at university. I stuck it out because I felt too old to start again at a new university. I was nowhere near as bad as your daughter but my mental health was not great and it took me a year to get a grad job after. It hasnt held me back at all, I have a senior role now, but my overarching regret from that time is that I stayed and didn't start again somewhere where I would be happier. I "lost" the year anyway post graduation and potentially I would have been much happier overall.

Motnight · 09/03/2026 13:27

What others have said (and my DD was thrown out of university at the end of her first year). Concentrate on supporting your DD to recover mentally and physically. Everything else is just unimportant at this stage.

Trusttheawesomeness · 09/03/2026 13:52

KateBridgerton · 09/03/2026 13:21

This thread is so sad.

OP I'm in my late 30s and I absolutely hated my time at university. I stuck it out because I felt too old to start again at a new university. I was nowhere near as bad as your daughter but my mental health was not great and it took me a year to get a grad job after. It hasnt held me back at all, I have a senior role now, but my overarching regret from that time is that I stayed and didn't start again somewhere where I would be happier. I "lost" the year anyway post graduation and potentially I would have been much happier overall.

She was offered a place at a different uni which her best friend goes to, but turned it down as she didn’t want to redo first year or be a year behind the cohort.
She’ll be a year behind her cohort anyway, have no friends at the uni, be isolated, and still struggling with the work by the sounds of it.
She isn’t doing anything to help herself so there isn’t much her mum can do.

OhDear111 · 09/03/2026 16:02

@Friendlygingercat She’s unlikely to get anywhere in the legal profession. That’s why a fresh start is best,

Ubertomusic · 09/03/2026 16:46

You need to address her eating disorder first of all as they're really dangerous and she won't be able to cope with either uni or work until she's at least on the mend (it usually takes ages to fully recover).
Get her a GP appointment as soon as possible, specifically for eating disorder as it's more urgent than her depression, and take things from there. She will need therapy for ED at least.

Law is probably not the best choice for someone struggling with MH as it's a demanding job but you can sort it out later.

Shinyandnew1 · 09/03/2026 17:16

It doesn’t sound like she currently has the resilience, academic
background or the sound mental health to pursue a degree in law at the moment-they are hugely competitive and academically rigorous pathways. Telling her she needs to get a shift on as she’s 21 is also unhelpful -she won’t be able to access anything through this sort of pressure. Threats of ‘having’ to come home and get a degree apprenticeship are totally unrealistic as well (there aren’t any, especially not if you don’t have an impeccable academic record and probably know someone already in the company!).

Focus on letting her heal and getting her some proper medical support.

Potterymama11 · 09/03/2026 17:24

how do I remove the post ? You are right thanks for flagging Xx

OP posts:
GoldenCupsatHarvestTime · 09/03/2026 20:16

Potterymama11 · 09/03/2026 17:24

how do I remove the post ? You are right thanks for flagging Xx

You can’t. You have to report it and ask for MN HQ to remove it. Although I’m not sure why you’ve decided to

LiquoriceAllsorts2 · 03/05/2026 06:31

What does she want to do with law? If she can’t qualify as a barrister or solicitor does it mean that she should actually look to study something else instead. Degree apprenticeships are hard to get on to so that shouldn’t be the backup option.
it sounds like she has struggled with the jobs/ volunteer work she has done - she needs to focus on getting to a point where she mentally can deal with working

SoftIce · 04/05/2026 11:23

Your poor daughter. Sounds like she had a lot on and still feels very vulnerable.

I agree with previous posters: on job applications / in interviews, do not mention university.

I would not go back to university at this point - I would find a job or apprenticeship and possibly complete an OU degree alongside (maybe at a later stage, once she is sure about a career).

A solicitor apprenticeship would be ideal, but they are so difficult to get that it probably is not for her.

But would she be interested in something like tax? (I don't know much about it but tax seems law-adjacent to me.) There could be level 3 apprenticeships (starting in accounting and then moving into tax) which sound very worthwhile and have good progression opportunities.

https://www.kpmgcareers.co.uk/apprentice/tax-law/tax-apprenticeship/

https://www.leadershipacademy.nhs.uk/programmes/apprenticeships/apprenticeships-on-offer/finance-apprenticeships-2/

I would try for finance apprenticeships with the NHS or local government or local firms. It also depends a bit on her GCSE grades. What did she get in maths?

Tax Apprenticeship

https://www.kpmgcareers.co.uk/apprentice/tax-law/tax-apprenticeship

SoftIce · 04/05/2026 13:44

I also wonder if law is really as restrictive as previous posters say (regarding the C at A-level) or if these posters are thinking of high-flying city law firms / corporate law? Would a low-key criminal law firm really be as picky?

For example, I've read good things on TSR about this law degree:
https://www.ntu.ac.uk/course/nottingham-law-school/ug/llb-law-full-time#entry-requirements

Which is definitely not a top university and "only" has 120 UCAS points / BBB entry requirements for law, but apparently very good connections, placements and employability, again for law?

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