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Home at Last - Some tips for managing the holidays with college students

Here are some tips from my own experience to help you have stress free and joyous holidays when your college student returns home!

My heart pounded with anticipation as I waited on the train platform to greet my freshman daughter. This was to be her first visit home since leaving for college at New York University three months earlier. It had not been an easy three months for either of us. 9/11 was still a vivid memory, one that my daughter witnessed first hand living by Washington Square Park. True I had been to see her during parents weekend and for her late September birthday, but this was coming home to the nest at last! Visions of dinners with all her favorite foods and lively conversation made me smile with contentment.

 

 She breezed off the train with a sophisticated air, looked around, sniffed and said, “ I might want to go back early to New York, and not spend the entire Thanksgiving weekend at home.”  Aside from feeling like a turkey with the stuffing knocked out of it, I wondered what had changed?

 

The transition to college is a monumental one for both parents and students. Let’s take a look at how both sides view visits home and explore some tips for easing the rough spots. It helps to think of the family system like a mobile. When pieces are added or removed the balance shifts and wobbles until equilibrium is established again. When a child leaves home both they and the family have to readjust, develop new interactions and routines. Once that child returns, all feels out of balance once again. As a parent you might feel like you no longer have the control that you once had. As a student used to being independent and living by your own rules, you might resent what you perceive as stifling parental demands.  Siblings also have to readjust, sharing family time and resources.

 

Parents may view a visit home, much like I did, a chance to spend quality time with your son or daughter, doing all the things you used to enjoy only compressed into a short timeframe. They are longing to reconnect and have more than a text message conversation.  Students may be exhausted; feel overloaded with schoolwork and pulled in a thousand directions trying to visit friends and family both.  They want all of the creature comforts of home but may not realize the family’s needs.

 

It is important for both parents and students to be realistic about what to expect during a visit home. The guidebook, “ Don’t tell me what to do, Just send money” by Helen E. Johnson and Christine Schelhas – Miller offers some things to do and some things to avoid to have a satisfying holiday visit for the entire family.  Communicate in advance about what you want to do during the break.  Renegotiate rules such as what is now an appropriate curfew. Don’t just assume students will revert to the old rules since they have been free to set their own schedules at school.  Have a family meeting to discuss important logistics issues such as who gets to drive the car and when or what chores are expected to be done. Avoid planning family activities before discussing them with the student.  Don’t feel rejected if your student doesn’t spend as much time with you as you hoped.  Do some special things for your student but not to the extent that you put the rest of your life on hold, in order to be at their beck and call.

 

My daughter did not return early to the city and we had a brief but fairly happy visit.

I realized that I was welcoming home not the same child that left in August, but a young woman coming into her own and that was something to be thankful for.

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Just a short thought to get the word out quickly about anything in your neighborhood.
Share something with your neighbors. Write a new post... What's up? Make an announcement, speak your mind, or sell something
Richard Waselik May 19, 2013 at 05:57 am
There is no "suckles away". The money is deposited by those that use it. The rest isRead More relentless retoric...
Daniella Ruiz May 19, 2013 at 05:44 am
another 'not for profit' that suckles away at the very core of peoples generosity?? better toRead More 'retire' the banking/WS thieves that casually gore the system with relentless greed, schemes and secrecy.
Ivy's Simply Homemade
nascarblue May 17, 2013 at 08:05 am
happy happy anniversary, i love your food, you can tell when a business takes pride in what they do.Read More wishing you many many more years, i will definatly be back, along with my friends, we love your food.
Kate May 19, 2013 at 02:05 pm
Oh, and please spread the word, and bring a friend to the meeting! :)
Kate May 19, 2013 at 02:03 pm
Hi Naty! That would be so great! The next RTM meeting in Waterford is on June 3rd, at 7:00 p.m.Read More The more people who show up and tell the town we want Cohanzie School to be repurposed, the better! This is politics, after all, and it is the residents showing up and telling the town this is a building we care about, this is a property we want access too. Imagine at least the 1923 section being repurposed into some department that would benefit the town. The town will demolish Cohanzie, sell the land and the bricks, and turn around in a year or two and say "We need more space! Let's build a new building!". Why should we do that when Cohanzie School is there, it can be repurposed, and it is so important for our town's history and the Cohanzie community? What if there was a park area where the basketball courts are, a path to walk around the building and down a part of the hill. Sledding could still happen, ball playing or other activities on the lower level. This retains the historic building, the architecture, the Cohanzie name, the community "presence", the hill, the ball field. It can be a place to go and relax. Even a dog park can be built on part of it! There is nothing like that in that section of town. Leary Field is remote and isolated. It is a ball field. With Cohanzie Firehouse and Lisa Dedrick Field right there, you feel the presence of community, without being isolated or unable to grab a quiet moment or more. Come on Waterford. This building and grounds belongs to us. Let's reclaim it before it is demolished and the bricks sold. Don't believe it cannot be repurposed. Asbestos, oil tanks, and other environmental factors are ALWAYS present in old schools, so the experts have told me. Old schools are repurposed all the time. It is a matter of convincing the town officials that this is what we WANT. Please speak up! Please SHOW UP, at the RTM meeting on June 3rd, at the Town Hall at 7:00 p.m. They are waiting to see what kind of turnout we get. Ignoring one resident or twenty is easy. Ignoring 100 or 500 is hard. We can do this, if you HELP.
Naty Bush May 18, 2013 at 11:44 am
Where will the meeting take place? I might be able to go to say why it shouldn't be demolished.
Liz May 12, 2013 at 09:06 pm
Mr. Steiner wants to build 72 three story homes on 32 acres in addition to the 60 condos in the twoRead More large buildings. That is more than two individual units per acre or if you include the 60 condos - that is MORE than 4 units per acre! The area around the property for new building is zoned 3 acres per unit. The average of currently built housing abutting the property is about one acre per unit. That is not in keeping with the neighborhood character.
Daniella Ruiz May 12, 2013 at 05:36 pm
Mr Steiner may be the last hope for this decrepit place. The neighbors need to move along, or buyRead More the place themselves. Change might help the stonewalling attitude that has become evident in nearly the entire town, revolving around exclusive entitled old farts with nothing better to do than remember their glory days of Seaside. Its gone, & it's not going to revert back to a pasture either. (too many complaints about that cow smell and so forth). My advice is to listen carefully and try to work something out, get over your own selfish grandious dreams of Pelham Manor style estates and do SOMETHING before it simply falls apart like Norwich Hospital, the countless thread/manufacturing mills, and every other historic building that has been left to rot.
Daniella Ruiz May 14, 2013 at 08:53 am
mary m>> common sense? heee hee. in this day and age? lawyers have made every attempt toRead More eradicate that concept from our every life activity. write it into some law, that can be thence used as future gurantee of use of, by and for their own existence? it's like job security for that entire group, keep the general public at a disadvantage, unable to apply common sense (whats left of it they havent entombed in laws) and uneasy about acting on their own. John Y has the right attitude, heave the cra.pp on the peoples lawn, and hope it doesn't lay there for days as well!
John Yannacci, Sr. May 13, 2013 at 10:09 am
Mary May, I don't know the legality of posting signs on telephone poles. But, take a ride aroundRead More Waterford on Saturday mornings and you'll see signs on anything that is verticle. Take a ride around the same neighborhoods on Wednesday and half the signs will still be there. I wonder if the folks who have had the same yard sale sign at the corner of Great Neck and Rope Ferry Rds. for two and a half weeks wonder why cars are still stopping at their house every Saturday morning.
Mary May May 13, 2013 at 09:53 am
Um I believe it is ILLEGAl to post ANY sign on a telephone pole ANYWAY but free standing signsRead More should be removed after sale is over ! Really a state law just COMMON SENSE we have lost along the way !