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'The Stressed Years of Their Lives'

Author: This is 鈥渢he book I wish I鈥檇 had when my children were going to college."

 was published by St. Martin's Press in April 2019. In their book, B. Janet Hibbs, Ph.D. 鈥84 and co-author Anthony Rostain, M.D. draw on personal and clinical experience to unpack the collegiate perfect storm: greater academic and social pressure at a point when identity is still forming and when (in the absence of family scaffolding) untreated alcohol abuse, mood disorders, and learning problems emerge or intensify. 鈥淭rue independence is a multiyear project,鈥 they write. Here, Hibbs shares some of the book鈥檚 hard-won wisdom and pragmatic advice for how parents can build a sturdy springboard from childhood to adulthood. 


Elizabeth Mosier: You observe that parents are often so focused on their children鈥檚 cognitive development鈥攊n part, because that鈥檚 what colleges reward鈥攖hat they neglect to encourage self-management.

B. Janet Hibbs: Social-emotional readiness  is an area of expertise of my co-author, Dr. Anthony Rostain. He often sees kids with ADD and some kind of executive functioning problem, who haven鈥檛 learned to manage their time or the structure of their days because their parents have always organized this for them. 

A parent鈥檚 first instinct is 鈥淗ow can I help you?鈥 But they often make the mistake of over-functioning for their child, managing their time, and letting them off the hook for chores and other responsibility-building tasks. They might provide too many safety nets, rather than removing this scaffolding during high school so that their teens can become more self-reliant. This creates a situation for a student where the increased demands of college (鈥渁dulting lite,鈥 one of my sons calls it) results in an overwhelming sense of 鈥淚 don鈥檛 know how to do this.鈥

To put this 鈥渋ntensive parenting鈥 in context, the past two decades have seen a cultural shift from parental encouragement of autonomy in childhood to parental control. Of course we have an enormous investment in our children, but finally, one has to accept as a parent that, as much as we hope and dream for our children, those are our hopes and dreams. Children are stressed, in part, because parents are transmitting an enormous amount of anxiety to them, from their own fears that their children won鈥檛 be OK. Today, parents see any departure from a linear trajectory as a problem to be fixed, rather than as part of learning. It鈥檚 better for children to learn from their mistakes rather than have a parent catch every fall, which makes kids afraid to fail.

Other consequences of the intense emphasis on achievement is a mindset barrier鈥攖he fear of 鈥渘ot making it.鈥 Many universities focus on helping first-generation or lower-income students to believe that they can 鈥渕ake it.鈥 But there鈥檚 also a mindset barrier for better resourced kids who feel they have to make all A鈥檚 or their lives are ruined. These kids can鈥檛 tolerate anything less than perfection. They鈥檙e not used to disappointing anyone, and they don鈥檛 feel free to say they鈥檙e not doing well. One sophomore in a private high school in Philadelphia told her parents, 鈥淚 feel so much pressure, because you鈥檙e paying all this money.鈥 The parents kept saying, 鈥淒on鈥檛 worry about your grades,鈥 but she had internalized the message that she wouldn鈥檛 have a good life unless she went to the best colleges and did stellar work. That鈥檚 really a destructive, perfectionistic message. And one reason why gap years are a good thing, because of the maturational experience of living your life, versus living to achieve.

It鈥檚 better for children to learn from their mistakes rather than have a parent catch every fall, which makes kids afraid to fail.

It鈥檚 important to put the stressors for parent and child in context. We鈥檙e living in a civic culture of fear that precipitates anxiety, distortions, and stress for parent and child alike, within us and between us. We as parents, educators, and as a culture need to take a wider view to reduce this stress. The college-for-all movement started four decades ago, and since then, the federal government has pulled back funding for community colleges and for any of the nontraditional college tracks. Since then, there鈥檚 enormous pressure on the narrow, linear path of the traditional four-year college as the only way you can have a good life. It鈥檚 important to remember that there is no singular path, no 鈥渙ne size fits all鈥 formula for a meaningful and successful life. Embracing that perspective can reduce the pressure on both generations.

EM: As a family therapist, you鈥檝e seen that parents can be preoccupied with getting their kids into college鈥攂ut surprised by the challenges that await these 鈥渆merging adults鈥 when they arrive on campus. What should parents expect, but don鈥檛 yet know to expect?

BJH: Parents don鈥檛 expect that 75 percent of diagnosable mental illnesses crop up by age 24. They chalk up their kid鈥檚 problematic behavior to 鈥渏ust being a teenager鈥 rather than looking at the heritable mental illness in their own families of origin. 

They may not know that between 40 and 50 percent of college-aged kids have anxiety disorders. The problem is partly familial, partly societal, and partly generational. These kids were born around the time of Columbine [High School mass shooting, in 1999]. The Twin Towers fell in 2001. The Great Recession happened in 2007鈥2009. They grew up in families with parents who were losing their jobs and houses. They absorbed the idea that the world is not safe and that, as hard as you try, things might go terribly wrong.

Are you ready to take responsibility for the consequences of your actions?

While parents know that kids are bombarded by social media pressures, they don鈥檛 know how these can intensify in college. Students become even more involved with image management as they try to make new friends. Beyond that, college presents a lot of free time, often used online. Maybe in the third wave of IT, tech companies will be more restrictive, more mindful about its addictive effects. But our Gen Z digital natives have absorbed these online pressures that have made them less resilient. They don鈥檛 know how to cope as well. Plus, virtual friends are a weak connection. There鈥檚 no substitute for face-to-face.

The good news is that parents can be a great help, especially when they鈥檝e learned to manage their own reactivity. I practiced for a long time being a responsive parent versus a reactive one. When small accidents happened鈥攁 kid would knock over a glass of milk鈥擨 would say, 鈥淭hat鈥檚 a surprise!鈥 and then we鈥檇 clean it up. However, nothing could have prepared me for the time my older son became so seriously depressed that he cut himself. When he showed me his injury, I made a conscious decision to remain calm. I needed to make him feel that I could contain his pain and distress. A lot of practice prepared me to respond helpfully, 鈥淭hank you for telling me. You鈥檙e not alone.鈥

My older son鈥檚 college experience was so frightening. But then my younger son, who I always thought would totally sail through life, had a series of medical traumas in his college years that affected him emotionally. And I thought, if this can happen to my Teflon son, this can happen to anyone鈥檚 kid. Their experiences, and what they taught me, inspired me to write this book.

EM: How can the college search process help prepare our children for the cognitive and emotional challenges ahead?

BJH: Asking your child, 鈥淲here do you want to go to college?鈥 starts an ongoing conversation about what makes them happy and what dreams they have for the future.

The college tour is another opportunity to learn. It鈥檚 a chance for you to ask important questions your kid is too embarrassed to ask: Where is the mental health facility? Where is the learning center? Are these offices in buildings that make it obvious why you鈥檙e going there? College students, like most of us, don鈥檛 want to feel different or stigmatized.

Though tours are designed to sell you on the college鈥檚 facilities and amazing features like the rock-climbing wall, what you really want to look at is how the campus enhances the ability to make friends. If it鈥檚 an elevator building, ride the elevator and see if anybody talks to you. The dorm suite might be beautiful, but it鈥檚 just dumb luck if you like your suitemates, and often the common rooms are empty because everyone鈥檚 brought their own computer and Xbox. Old-fashioned dorms with a long hall and a shared bathroom make it more likely that you鈥檒l run into a larger number of people, often enough to make friends. And of course you should ask about clubs and shared activities, which can be friendship incubators.

When you look at the ridiculously bad retention rates at some colleges, it鈥檚 clear they鈥檙e not doing a good enough job of helping students to succeed. Earlier, we discussed one mindset barrier to success: the fear of 鈥渘ot making it.鈥 But another barrier is social: 鈥淚 don鈥檛 feel like I belong.鈥 This sense of belonging is something kids can detect. On some of our college tours, my sons said, 鈥淚 don鈥檛 like the way the other kids here dress.鈥 Parents need to take that kind of comment seriously, because your kid is picking up on things you might miss about whether or not they鈥檒l fit in. And if they don鈥檛 fit in, it鈥檚 basically game over. They鈥檒l drop out, or drop out emotionally. Because the main reason that kids persist in college, even when it鈥檚 difficult, is the social glue of their friendships.

EM: You list suggested dialogues parents should begin to have with their children in high school, to help them plan how to deal with the challenges to their coping skills college might present. You peg these dialogues to key components of social-emotional maturity. For example: Are you ready to take responsibility for the consequences of your actions? Are you ready to make friends, deal with roommates, and find suitable social activities? Are you ready to ask for help when things aren鈥檛 going well for you?

BJH: Though we鈥檙e talking about preparing for college, parents could start these conversations well before high school. The goal is to promote your child鈥檚 autonomous self, which means tolerating the fact that they鈥檙e going to make some bad decisions or decisions you don鈥檛 like. But letting them have enough latitude now, while they live at home, prepares them for the freedom and responsibility that college brings.

Published on: 09/20/2019