My DS loves uni and the whole living with friends. He sailed through the first year but has had a terrible 2nd year.
Prior to uni he’d experienced 4 years of family bereavements and both DH and I had serious health problems. It culminated with my DSis, his aunt dying of cancer ( rapid and terminal at diagnosis) during his first term at uni. I think it was the straw that broke the camels back and he spiralled down. He has failed to complete any of his modules and we had to contact the uni wellbeing unit when he broke down and admitted he “didn’t want to be here” he was not referring to uni or his flat.
He then contacted his tutor and explained his situation. She has been great and has totally backed off. He didn’t want a leave of absence because he wouldn’t have been able to access the online course content. He has worked on his mental health, joined a gym and committed to play rugby most weekends at home. It has worked and he is very much back to his normal self. He had become very irritable and had no motivation.
My initial reaction to him spiralling was that he may have ADHD that wasn’t as obvious at school with better structure but since he was always super motivated prior to uni and never struggled with organisation. I now realise that he had classic symptoms of depression but was desperately trying to cope with it.
His flatmates have been great and along with his network of friends have watched him. His best friend had also gone through a very similar period and like DS has struggled to work out what was wrong or reach out. They met up recently and were able to open up. DS said he felt so much better when he realised he was not alone. He and his best friend are really the “solid” ones you would least expect to struggle but maybe this is the common mistake we make with young male adults and why they often seem to take their lives with no warning.
DS had a bit of a dip when he was 17 but we put it down to the pandemic and what was going on at home. Despite explaining all this his head of house was surprised that he was struggling since he was always so “solid”, his terminology. As a result of his dip he has learned how to turn things around but because he was away from home we were not able to spot the changes as easily as when he was in sixth form.
Maybe learning what keeps his mental health ticking over as a young adult will help him in the longterm.
OP the current group of uni students do seem to be struggling. Having spoken with the uni wellbeing unit they are aware of an increase in problems. My DS’s uni were incredibly quick to react and within 2hrs of me sending a request they had contacted him and had a chat. I thought he would be angry with me but he was relieved that he’d admitted he was struggling and he was able to work out a plan to fix it.
DS felt he was on his own but having opened up he realises that nearly everyone has a serious wobble. Sometimes it needs a change in direction, sometimes they just need the reassurance that it is normal to question decisions and it’s ok to change direction. Better to do that now before the are years deep into an unsuitable career.