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Secondary education

Connect with other parents whose children are starting secondary school on this forum.

Boarding school mums - how do you cope?

155 replies

thekidstaxi · 31/01/2020 20:16

Mums with DC at boarding school, how do you cope with your emotions? Do you feel you experience feelings of loss or loneliness?
With the looming realisation my baby will be spending more time at school than home I am starting to worry how I will manage. I am a single mum and we are very close. It was dd's choice to board & had very legitimate reasoning for doing so.
I do work and will be doing further study but I don't think it will fill the inevitable void.
Please tell me how you get through without self medicating with copious amounts of gin!

OP posts:
Drabarni · 03/02/2020 15:46

Mine went from H.ed, to boarding and I was terrified. I needn't have bothered about her as she fit in straight away.
The first night helping the younger and older ones who were home sick.

I on the other hand cried solidly from September until the xmas holidays. I still miss her so much, 16 now and started at 11, it does get easier though. Now, it's just a tear on the way home, just september after having her at home for 10 weeks.

You are bound to feel it, it's your child and there would be something wrong if you just waved them off without a thought or care.
We Skype often and mine can come home some weekends and then of course there's exeat.

Hello HG I can't believe it was 6 years ago I started a similar thread and I will never forget how you put my mind at rest.
Not sure if you can remember but I was reluctant but it was dd dream to go. Well, it's paid off and she is so happy and career is thriving, both due to school and outside influences. Thanks

BubblesBuddy · 03/02/2020 19:41

I would say I had a great deal of thought and care directed at my DDs. I just didn’t blub for months. Some people are more emotional than others. It doesn’t mean us slightly less emotional ones don’t care and don’t have great relationships with our DC. We do.

Valenciaoranges · 03/02/2020 21:39

My daughter boarded for 5 years and absolutely loved it, apart from the first two weeks. We are extremely close and have a fantastic relationship. She is super independent, confident, focused and just an absolute delight. However she boarded very close to home - no more than 40 mins away. I know people think it is odd, but it worked really well for us.
I miss her a lot, but I focus on the fantastic start she has had in life and how happy she is - at Uni now.

TheWomanTheyCallJayne · 03/02/2020 21:48

My two eldest board.
As someone said above, it's ok once you get into it. Daily life takes over. I do get waves of missing them but as they're content I tend to get over it quite quickly. I don't think it's ruined my relationship with them at all. They were 13 when they started so mature enough to understand what they were getting into and it was their choice.

happygardening · 03/02/2020 22:05

One of the things I often read on here and hear the children I talk to say is that there is no “fun” at school. Secondly from talking to the children I meet at work and working with the children and teachers everything seems so crammed in, the timetables are so packed, most in secondary now only get 1/2 an hour for lunch many skip food at school as they say there isn’t sufficient time or report eating their lunch sitting on stairs because there is no space.
I’m not saying every minute of a school day should be fun but the pace in boarding is inevitably slower, more time is given to meal times, obviously children sit at tables it’s a sociable time in a day, activities which are more fun/interesting/enjoyable are incorporated into the school day as well as the evening as most boarding schools pride themselves on offering a broad curriculum. Removing commuting from a child’s life can also can be a positive,
God knows we have our whole working lives to commute miss breaks, not eat properly and struggle try and fit any fun/interesting/enjoyable activities into out limited spare time.

TheWomanTheyCallJayne · 03/02/2020 22:10

@happygardening
Also wanted to say thank you. I'm under a different name but you really helped me work out what's what and what to do for the best quite a few years back before I even started this malarkey. The Ds I was asking for help with is now doing his A levels and doing well.

happygardening · 03/02/2020 22:13

Hi Drabarni I can’t believe it’s 6 years either brilliant news that your DDs is happy and her career is thriving.
Over the years of being involved on boarding both my DS’s and for work I’ve met very few parents (who live in the UK) who think you should only see your DC’s during the holidays. I also agree that teenage boys who boards frequently will hug their parents in front of their mates without any embarrassment.

happygardening · 03/02/2020 22:20

TheWomenTheyCallJayne that brilliant news.

clevud · 03/02/2020 22:21

Not sure why you do this to yourselves and your children. Family is the most important thing to grow and develop into a decent, caring and emotional intelligent human being. And yes, it's tiring working full time, taking them to swimming in the evening 4 times a week, doing homework and reading to them. Not to mention the rows. But it was my choice to have children and we are here for the good and the bad times. You are missing a big chunk of your children's life. For what? To conform to your peers? Because you did it and your mother did it? So you can perpetuate that sense of loss? Don't cheat yourself thinking 'my child is happy', yes probably they are, but children would be equally happy if they went to the local school or a day independent. And believe me, they'd develop equally well. Most importantly, don't go against your instincts and tear yourself away from them. That sense of emptiness will be there forever in your hearts and your children's, and ultimately will affect their emotional intelligence and your relationship.

Drabarni · 03/02/2020 22:31

My dd would be most insulted a random person on the internet seems to think she has no family because she boards at school.
What a weird presumption.
I bet I see more of my child than you do, unless of course you're a sahm.
Do you not use nurseries, schools, etc. Are your children with you every minute they aren't at school, because mine is.
I disagree that my child would be happy in the local school that couldn't begin to cater for her needs and aspirations, or goals, or ambition.

Yes, I do miss her terribly, I wish she hadn't gone tbh.
When you have a child so desperate for a place in a particular school, they work hard, pass lots of exams to gain entry. Then come back and tell us you've denied them the opportunity.
Because I couldn't be so selfish tbh.

BasiliskStare · 04/02/2020 05:36

Have Pmed @thekidstaxi and a wave to HappyGardening

@clevud - you are not really answering the question are you? - each to their own - & do not try to write on both sides of the paper at once. After all - our children may end up with the Mrs Joyful prize for Raffia work Grin ( memo to self - tell ds about sense of emptiness in his heart ) Ha ha ha

Enough - back to the point

clevud · 04/02/2020 06:23

@basiliskstare not sure what question. Don't see any questions in Drabarni's comments. My children go to day school. I see them everymorning and when I come home at 6. And I spend every weekend with them. That's it. Nothing special, just life'routine with its ups and downs. Little crisises and little joys.

AnnDaloozier · 04/02/2020 06:26

They don’t They pretend you’re ok and ignore all questions about it even when you’re 50

Don’t have a dog and put it in a kennel.

BasiliskStare · 04/02/2020 06:38

Ah , OK so the question is how do you you cope with emotions with children at boarding school ( or indeed as OP phrases it )

happygardening · 04/02/2020 06:53

So now clevud quite a few parents with children at boarding school have come on here and say their children are happy, they have excellent relationships with their parents and are well adjusted emotionally intelligent
adolescents/young adults but you say this is not true. What evidence are you basing this statement on or are you saying we’re all delusional?
As Drabarni said not all of us are in a position to send our children to day schools and provide all they want to do in their spare time.
And as for “conforming to peers” or doing what our mothers did neither of those reasons applies to me or many who parents who I’ve met over the years.
I suspect like many on here who write such negative comments about boarding you really know nothing about it, you clearly don’t have children who board so how can you?

Drabarni · 04/02/2020 09:45

There are so many different reasons why a parent may choose a boarding school, we aren't all the same. Just as parents of state vary, and those of private.
We aren't conforming to peers, or carrying on tradition. Until mine went I'd never even met someone who attended boarding school, just wasn't on our radar at all. Coming from a low income, wc background wouldn't have considered it as no way could we ever be able to afford it. The fees are more than we earn Grin

OP, I had a lovely support thread going a couple of years ago and if you entitle the thread "SUPPORT thread for boarding parents" (or similar) it should be left alone by those who want to derail.
We talked about all sorts of boarding school life and as interesting.
I loved the labelling discussion, we had quite a laugh in places too.

TheWomanTheyCallJayne · 04/02/2020 11:11

My eldest gets even more annoyed than I do with unsolicited advice about how we’re failing our children by sending them to boarding school.
I casually mentioned boarding on Facebook once and got a lecture from a stranger. Ds1 sent me this straight after

Boarding school mums - how do you cope?
magnaconcordia · 04/02/2020 11:54

I've got used to facing prejudice. I don't take it personally any more. And I try to select wisely who to talk about certain topics (though not always successful!). A lovely mum I knew for years once said to me people becoming gay was caused by mental health problem so it's 'fixable'. Also, according to her, young girls who wore a short skirt and make up were sexually inviting all the men around them. 😶 Even loviest people can be bluntly cruel and naive when they talk about something they don't quite know and beyond their imagination, especially if they tend to like labelling or are insecure? So I take that people who are against boarding are not necessarily attacking me personally so it doesn't hurt me. Free to have an opinion.

1805 · 04/02/2020 16:28

Actually OP, there is a relevant point clevud is making. Not the one I think he/she meant to make, but relevant all the same.
As a parent of dc who board, part of the emotions you will likely have to deal with is other people - often strangers - will try and tell you that you are damaging your dc etc as clevud thinks. You need to learn to ignore these often upsetting remarks as they know nothing about your family. I am sure you have thought long and hard about making the choice of schools, and I hope it works out well for you all. It is hurtful though when people like clevud spout on about stuff they know nothing about.
It isn't easy for parents, and comments like clevuds are just spiteful and designed to make you feel bad. Rise above them and watch your dc thrive at boarding school. Most dc have a great time. Mine are!

1805 · 04/02/2020 16:34

By the way - my dd has bounced around various types of schools including state schools, a private day school, and now weekly boards. She is now the most settled, happy, calm and balanced she has been since starting school. It's all about getting the right school for the right child.

happygardening · 04/02/2020 17:36

I totally agree that people are entitled to their own opinions. But when people who don’t know anything about boarding or know the parents of children who board or the children themselves who board state categorically that boarding will cause a sense of emptiness, that their emotional intelligence will be affected and their relationship with their family will permanently damaged I can’t have but time to it. If people said I would worry that boarding will cause X Y and Z or if they read comments from parents who give a different perspective and said I can see it works well for you and your DC but I don’t think it would work for me and I personally don’t like the idea that fine. But it’s the black and white statements with no evidence

yolofish · 04/02/2020 17:47

Hmm. I understand that people choose boarding for a wide variety of reasons these days - not so much family tradition for example, but to do with talents/opportunities. And I'm not knocking it per se.

But what I do wonder is how many of you who are parents of boarders have seen your children reach the age at which you started boarding (presumably a fair few), or perhaps are older - eg grandparents and talking to your adult children about what boarding meant to them, how it affected them?

I didnt dislike boarding, although was dreadfully homesick at times. DH hated it. We both agreed we would never send our kids to board.

My now deceased DM and I had a lot of discussions about boarding when she was in her 80s and me in my 50s - it's fair to say that we had very different impressions of the parent/child experience.

happygardening · 04/02/2020 17:47

Sorry posted to soon underpinning it that frustrates me.
I now work extensively in the state sector I could quite easily come on here and make lots of negative comments about the things I see and details how I think the way state education is currently organised is having a signing effect on many children’s mental health but I accept that many believe in their choices and that my comments would be inappropriate and likely to. Abuse considerable upset.
As parents we do what we believe to be the right thing for our DC’s few decision are clear cut especially when it comes to education there are many factors that we take into consideration when we choose a school. I work with some pretty inadequate parents but very few parents who hi couldn’t care just because parents who couldn’t less about their children’s welfare. Just because parent A thinks boarding wouldn’t work for their child it doesn’t mean that it won’t work for the circumstances that parent B and their DC find themselves in. Instead of criticising we should respect other parents decisions.

okiedokieme · 04/02/2020 17:56

Dd boarded for 6th form. It was fine. She has friends who boarded from young, 7 or 8, they are pretty screwed up and emotionally detached. 11 should be the absolutely youngest any child should be allowed to board and then only weekly (island communities etc it's essential for secondary)

happygardening · 04/02/2020 18:01

yolofish Im sure you had a different impression from that of your mother but I think things have changed enormously between parent and child. In many families communication is more open parents listen to their children and take their views into consideration much more than they did when I started working with children 35 years ago. Children are no longer “sent away to board” most parents I know spend a long time thinking about it before making the decision, the stiff upper lip culture has gone from many boarding schools, not only do parents not want their children to be unhappy and are quick to remove them if they did neither do boarding schools. I’ve seen patents of very homesick children be advised to remove them from a school and send them to a day school. Boarding staff are trained to look out for any unhappiness counsellors and therapists are now the norm at boarding schools. Staff rather than keeping their distance are more relaxed and informal than those found in day school they work hard to form meaningful and supportive relationships with their pupils. I worked for 6 years in the boarding sector generally I saw happy relaxed children the vast majority were having a time of their lives they knew that they had very supportive loving parents and also supportive caring staff around them both who are dedicated to their welfare.
No one suggests it’s right for all but it’ can be right for many.