Anyone who has ridden a rollercoaster can distinctly recall the "click, click, click" sound as the car climbs to the top of the first and largest incline. Instinctively, the rider knows they are about to defy the laws of gravity for few a seconds of sheer terror and exhilaration bundled into one sensation. Riding that rollercoaster is a lot like preparing to send your child off to college for the first time.
As parents, we spend years building our children and ourselves up to face that steepest incline…when our children graduate high school, just weeks before being propelled into the next chapter: college life. Weeks leading up to high school graduation are often a blur, stress levels are high, final projects, exams and performances are happening. And most seniors who have been fighting "senioritis" for months finally see the end of the tyrannical regime of teachers and parents.
I of course, desperately wanted the summer before our daughter departed to college to be magical in some way. Experiences worthy of accompanying an emotional and beautiful soundtrack that would be the culmination of her childhood. Viewers would see our family hugging, looking at old photographs, crying, laughing and perhaps walking arm and arm along a stretch of beach, at sunset of course. Next, we would embark on a lovely road trip to college all the while taking selfies, bonding like never before and sharing in all the possibilities of what is to come.
Instead, the weeks leading up to graduation and departure to college translated into bursts of emotion that manifested in squabbles that sounded something like this: "Don't worry, I won't be here in a few weeks bothering you anymore. You can't wait to be rid of me. "These emotional threats burst forth from my teenager who had somehow transformed into a house guest that had long overstayed her welcome. Of course, I was not blameless, wet towels left on the bathroom floor, shoes strewn about in our foyer, or milk left out all day, would send me into the ageless diatribes of, "You know, when you get to college, no one is going to pick up after you except you", or during dinner, "You wait, college food isn't all it's cracked up to be, you will be calling home begging me to FedEx you Brussels sprouts," and of course the classic, "Oh, yes, I am well aware you know it all, I only raised you for the past 18 years but what do I know?"
Yes, while my daughter and I were careening down the road of constant bickering underpinned by the fear of the separation we were about to experience, my husband (Switzerland) remained silently neutral—brooding about our soon to be empty nest. He had not drawn up plans to remodel her room into a man cave, but was thinking in terms of the time he and I had long awaited to have to ourselves.
Despite all of the emotional navigation that happens during this season, there are the essentials and strategies of life away from home that need to be addressed.
HERE IS THE REAL LIST OF WHAT TO DO TO PREPARE YOUR CHILD FOR COLLEGE:
Source By: www.nationallife.com
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