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Looking Beyond the Nest: Navigating the College Process
It is that time of year again for high school juniors and their families. Spring has arrived,and that means college visits, SATs, SAT IIs, ACTs, APs, finals, papers, communityservice, summer jobs… The pressure truly mounts. In my more than twenty-five years as a psychotherapist, I have watched the psychological pressure on adolescents and families start earlier and grow exponentially as they progress through the college process. This psychological stress affects the family as a whole, the adolescent as an individual, and the adults in their role as parents.
This increased psychological stress can lead to varying degrees of symptoms of anxiety and depression for both adolescents and parents. Adolescents and adults will describe to me that they have many of the following symptoms: trouble falling asleep or staying asleep through the night, waking up with their mind racing and their heart pounding, decreased appetite and nausea, decreased energy, trouble concentrating, lethargy, dizziness, tightness in their chest, and feeling angry, nervous, and sad. One adolescent described his turmoil to me in this manner: “I am wigging out – I don’t know when it will start, and when it starts I feel like it won’t end.”
The first step is for the adolescent or adult to have a thorough medical check up to rule out any medical problems. Seeking the advice of a psychotherapist can then be useful. There are numerous coping strategies that I have found to be effective in helping adolescents and families prevent or cope with the anxiety and depression that can arise during this process.
Adolescents frequently tell me that they feel as if they can never escape the college process. It becomes the dominant topic of conversation amongst their peers, with their teachers, and certainly with their parents. They will complain that near-strangers, when finding out they are juniors or seniors in high school, will ask the inevitable, dreaded question: “Where are you applying?” One student joked that if one more person asked her where she was applying, her plan was to smile ironically and say: “My parents don’t believe in higher education for women.”
The pressure amongst peers is intense. Often within a friendship circle the students will be applying to the same or similar schools, and must cope with feelings of competition with their close friends. Just when they might be feeling the most anxious about the process, those closest to them are having similar anxieties. While this may at times be helpful in terms of sharing a common emotional experience, at other times it can overwhelm the student as the groups’ mutual anxiety grows synergistically. When the conversation is unrelenting amongst their peers, I coach the students in my practice to change the subject, remembering that there are a lot of other facets of their lives to discuss, and that focusing on enjoying their time with their friends is important. One student told me that she finally said to her friends: “We are more interesting people than
Relationships within the family are often under great strain during the college process.
investment in the process greatly angers the child and supplants the adolescent’s ability to
“always freaking out” while their parents describe their child as angry and
These fights can be particularly noteworthy during the spring and summer college visits
when families spend extended periods of time together in the car driving long distances,
with the application foremost in their minds. I suggest to families that these drives
represent precious time together which will soon become even rarer, and that they should
focus on seeing these trips as bonding time, rather than fighting time. This will allow for
clearer thinking during the college visits, and will help make the visits a calmer rather
than more anxious time.
As in most areas of family conflict, focusing on what is developmentally appropriate for
the child, improving communication, and emphasizing moderation are critical in reducing
conflict between family members during the college process.
While we often think of adolescents as being on a fast-track to maturity, certain
developmental traits of college-bound teens may feel familiar to parents from their
child’s pre-school years. Remember when your three year old child exclaimed in
frustration “I can do it myself!” when you tried to help as they struggled to zip that first
autumn jacket on the way to the first day of nursery school? And yet, moments later, as
the child entered their new classroom, they clung to your leg for dear life, terrified by the
realization that they were about to enter a room full of strangers.
We can draw a connection between the trials and tribulations of the first day of preschool,
and two facets of adolescent development as the student embarks on the college
process. First, we can think of the bureaucratic labyrinth of the college process – replete
with endless paperwork, innumerable phone calls and emails, and seemingly interminable
exam prep – as the jacket zipper, a skill which the high schooler is at once unprepared to
complete on their own, and yet loathe to accept help in carrying out. Second, we can
think of that moment of entry into the nursery school classroom as a metaphor for the
great – and often unspoken – fears harbored by the college bound student, who is faced
with the idea of leaving parents, home, friends, and all that is familiar and safe.
Ah, and not to forget the wrenching feeling the parents have at the moment when they
leave their child in the nursery school classroom for the first time, and its echo in the
near-future moment when they will move their child into their first college dorm. I do
believe that at times the fighting between parents and children during these late high
school years is directly related to the preparation for, and fear of, this upcoming
separation.
Let’s return to that jacket zipper for a moment. I find it notable that “the process”
assumes a level of organizational knowledge and skill by the student, while actual lessons
in this area may have never occurred. We can think of the college process as having four
areas: the bureaucratic (the maze of paperwork and deadlines) the content (the actual
written essays and applications), the student’s current life (classes, extracurricular
activities, and standardized testing), and the emotional fallout from the perfect storm
created by all of this happening at once.
In tackling the bureaucracy, we should ask, whether the student knows how to set up an
appropriate filing system (whether on their computer or the old-fashioned way) to track
the myriad requirements, deadlines, testing dates, study dates, interviews, and different
facets of each application? Have they learned how to comfortably and properly approach
teachers or community members for recommendations? Having a parent, family member,
or outside coach who has good organizational skills teach these to the student can be
invaluable, in lowering the student’s anxiety, improving the process and outcome of the
college undertaking, and as a long term skill set which will continue to reap benefits in
the actual college years and beyond.
When looking at the content portion of the process, students often tell me that the college
application essay causes them great anxiety, and is a source of frequent fights with their
parents. If essay-writing skills are a challenge for a student, I would recommend that they
seek out writing coaches at their school. For instance, some schools have a writing center
or college essay writing class, and these can be valuable resources. Other students find
that getting the main essays written as early as the summer before senior year greatly
diminishes their stress, as does having a non-family member such as an English teacher
read the essay and offer critique. If a student has a known learning or processing disorder,
additional support will be critical during these more intense high school years.
In terms of the rest of the student’s current life, how has the student handled time
management and study skills in the past? If those are weak areas, then the added volume
of tasks in junior and senior year will be overwhelming. This is an important time to
review or teach good general organizational strategies and time management skills.
Working with a student on planning strategies to incorporate all of the class work, testing,
writing, athletics, community service – and breaks for simple pleasures – will circumvent
the inevitable feelings of being overwhelmed each morning as they try to imagine how
they will get through the day.
Parents can take many steps to repair, limit, and prevent the emotional fallout of the
college process. Here is the area where good communication between parents and
adolescents is most critical. All of the adolescents I work with wish for a “cheerleader” in
their lives, an adult who is reassuring and supportive. At this time in their lives, they
often need someone to remind them that this is an individual process and that what is
right for them may not be right for a peer, and to assure them that they will get into
college, as it seems all students fear that they will be summarily rejected.
The calming voice of the parent who believes that the student can be successful in the
separation from home and in making new friends will bolster the student’s own belief in
a positive outcome. Remember, at the base of family relationships, children need to know
that someone loves them just for who they are, unconditionally. Moreover, the child
needs that person to demonstrate their commitment to the child regularly, and particularly
during a stressful time.
I remind families that students do not come to the college process as an emotional blank
slate, and it is likely they have been struggling to varying degrees with typical emotional
issues of adolescence, including: difficulty in friendships, body image insecurity,
fluctuating self-confidence, and moodiness. These issues seem to grow exponentially
under the stress of the college process, and parental communication and support become
ever more critical.
In particular, adolescents will often tell me that they find that one of their parents is
playing the “good cop” to the other parent’s “bad cop” as they tackle the college process.
I ask families to reconsider this dynamic by using more effective methods of
communication. Specifically, I advocate that parents follow the model I describe as
“collegial problem solving,” in which they consciously take account of each family
members’ appropriate ownership of their part of the process. This enables the family as a
whole to focus on communicating honestly about their feelings, with the parents
practicing what I think of as an “empathy first” model of problem solving, and thus
demonstrating a calm, flexible, and reassuring approach to issues that may arise for the
student.
Maintaining good communication between the two parents at the adult level is equally
important. Adolescents tell me that the tension around the process causes their parents to
fight, which only greatly increases their own anxiety and fear of disappointing their
parents. Parents do well to “divide and conquer” by delineating the parts of the process
they will each support their child in, and communicating amongst themselves so that the
student is not playing the role of go-between. Communication between the adults
becomes ever more important in families in which there has been a divorce, as there may
be even more adults involved in the process, and a greater need not to overwhelm the
adolescent with competing adult agendas.
I ask many of the individuals I work with to use relaxation response techniques, such as
guided imagery, and to pay attention to the quality of their nutrition – a struggle for many
adolescents – and to maintain appropriate levels of exercise. Families will benefit by
reaching an agreement to have “college free days” when they don’t discuss the process at
all - something often harder for parents than children to achieve.
I assure the families that I work with that they are more than the college application
process – this is only one stage on the developmental path of both the adolescent and the
adults. While it represents a huge challenge for all family members, with good
communication skills, and proper attention to the psychological implications of the
process, they will, with their relationships still intact, comfortably reach that beautiful fall
day when they hug good-bye outside that first dorm room.
Susan Kassler-Taub, MSW, LCSW
Psychotherapy: children, adults, couples
330 North Harrison Street - Suite 6
Princeton, NJ 08540
609-921-1994
2011
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