Q. My question concerns my 19-year-old son, who's being secretive and lying to us about various activities and the girl he's dating. He's a sophomore in college, and we've always been fairly open with him. He's had a few drinking episodes in which we've had to pick him up so he wouldn't have to drive. He was sent off to college with condoms and his father's instructions on how to use them if need be (just in case, of course ... but we told him abstinence is best). We've handled these issues with common sense and no drama, and let him know that much of this is part of growing up.
This past year, our son began a long-distance relationship with a girl we don't consider appropriate. She's a year younger than him and from a dysfunctional family. While she seems to be bright and motivated, and is now in college on a scholarship, she's also controlling and very needy. We forbade him to see her, but she wouldn't let go of him, and we discovered that he'd gone on a camping trip with her when we thought he was camping with male buddies.
Once we realized we couldn't control his actions, we cut off financial support, saying, "You can see her, but you can't use our car." But, he secretly saw her all summer, using our car and gas money, by saying he was with friends. He's now back at college; she's at another college. And he's still visiting her and lying to us, until we confront him about it. How can we get him to be honest? Maybe he really is in love, but if so, he just should admit it.
I realize we can't make him break up with her, yet I worry he'll waste his college years, and our tuition money, mooning over her. I just wish he could develop some character and decide what "he" wants in life. Your thoughts?
A. While you and your partner have calmly coped with your son's normal, teenage high school problems, you're overreacting to his young adult life now.
Your son's college environment is packed solid with a variety of young women, and it's unlikely he's made a final life decision. It's good, at least, that he and she aren't at the same college. That gives your son more freedom to look around. If you battle your son about this young woman, he might stay with her just to prove to you that you can't control him. Sponsor your son in college, as long as he takes his classwork seriously and searches for a career for his lifetime. As to choosing his partner, that's not a parent's prerogative!
For a free newsletter about guidelines to success for new college students, send a large self-addressed, stamped envelope to P.O. Box 32, Watertown, WI, 53094, or go to www.sylviarimm.com for more information.
Dr. Sylvia B. Rimm is the director of the Family Achievement Clinic in Cleveland, Ohio, a clinical professor of psychiatry and pediatrics at the Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine, and the author of many books on parenting. More information on raising kids is available at www.sylviarimm.com. Please send questions to: Sylvia B. Rimm on Raising Kids, P.O. Box 32, Watertown, WI 53094 or srimm@sylviarimm.com. To read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate website at www.creators.com.
COPYRIGHT 2008 CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.
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