By Sharon Omahen
University of Georgia
Starting college can be a big adjustment for a student. It also
can begin a period of separation and anxiety for parents.
When a child starts school for the first time, the child and
parents are usually only separated for a few hours a day. But a
college-bound young adult can go months without seeing parents
and be separated by hundreds of miles, said Don Bower, an
Extension human development specialist with the University of
Georgia College of Family and Consumer Sciences.
“This is a time of adjustment for parents,” Bower said.
Adjustment time
Whether the student lives at home or moves away, going to college
is a big step toward adulthood, he said.
Randy Harris’ 19-year-old daughter, Jennifer, decided to stay at
home and attend a local junior college. She commutes to class.
“This has helped me adjust to her being in college,” Harris said,
“because she’s still at home every night.”
Unlike Harris, most parents will experience a sense of loss often
called the “empty nest syndrome,” Bower said.
At first, parents may look forward to more free time, less loud
music and not having to fight for the phone, computer or car. But
after their child has settled at college, they may feel
differently.
“They begin to notice how quiet it is without the student at home
and comment on how much less they spend on groceries,” Bower
said.
Many parents may not be ready to give up their roles as primary
caregivers and protectors.
“Successful parenting involves devoting one’s life to a totally
dependent baby,” Bower said, “then gradually preparing them to
become independent.”
Parents need a new focus
But when the student leaves, it can be difficult for parents to
adjust when they are no longer needed in the same ways.
“When students are in college, parents are less privy to every
aspect of their child’s life,” he said. The parents often don’t
know the details of the student’s whereabouts or friends.
“Parents must realize that young adults will make their own
decisions – and hope for the best,” Bower said.
To help with the adjustment, parents should redirect the time and
energy they once focused on the child. “It can be time to
develop, reawaken and pursue old and new hobbies, leisure
activities and careers,” he said.
Parents can also welcome and develop an adult-to-adult
relationship with the child. “Children always need parents,” he
said. “But the relationship may become more peer-like.”
They should encourage their children to make independent
decisions. Mike Dyche of Griffin, Ga., saw his daughter,
Courtney, develop as an adult during the time she spent at the
New York Film Academy.
“Moving from Georgia to New York was a big change for both of
us,” he said. “The experience helped her become more responsible
and helped her develop a strong sense of independence.”
Now that she’s had the experience of living on her own, his
daughter has decided to return to Georgia to continue her
education.
“If she had lived in a dormitory, it would still have been a
home-based setting,” Dyche said. “Living on her own in New York
City was a life-building experience. She plans to go back to New
York to live and work when she finishes her education.”
No matter what age your child reaches, parents will always be
parents and worrying is part of the job description.
As the father of a commuting college student, Harris doesn’t have
to worry about his daughter being away from home at night. But he
still worries.
“Now I worry about her driving the further distance every day,”
he said.