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I moved into my dorm room wayyy back in August. I did okay, homesick wise all the way up until Winter Break. A week before I had to return to school, I got really sad and depressed and I just really didn't want to go. I just returned yesterday, and I've never been so homesick ever! I cried all Sunday, and this morning. Now, I'm just really really sad. I miss my home, my Dad, my Mom and my sister. I miss them more than my own Boyfriend!
Normally, by now, students are feeling more comfortable at school, but I'm feeling more lost and sad than ever.
Is this normal?

2007-01-08 13:07:32 · 6 answers · asked by Leah 1 in Family & Relationships Friends

I've made plenty of friends here at school. Me and my roommate have become really close and I even applied with her and a couple friends to live together on campus next year. It's not like I've got nobody here, but thats the thing..I feel that way.
I'm about 3 hours from home. I moved from the southeast part of Michigan (i lived in a city) to the Western part of Michigan (very very rual) I'm very close with my family, so that makes it all the more hard...i just don't get why Im so sad now, so far into the school year.

2007-01-08 13:22:16 · update #1

6 answers

Yes, it is normal to feel lost when you are out of your comfort zone. You said it, though....the students are feeling more comfortable, but you are not.

You need to lean into the fear. Embrace the adventure. Have you done all you can to become one of the students that feel more comfortable? What do they do to signify that they are more comfortable? What can you do to make yourself more comfortable?

Start a morning routine that includes one other student.
Meet someone for cornflakes or coffee at the same time everyday. Get to class 15 minutes early to chat with the professor.

You have some holes in your daily life that need to be filled. You are so accustomed to having your mom, dad and sister around....everything is feeling alien. To make this a success you will have to reach out to new people. There is someone else on campus that feels the same as you do. Seek them out. Join a club.

This is an adventure. This is your big launch into adulthood. If you cling to home now....you will just have to go through these growing pains at a future date.

Nothing stays the same. Everything changes. Technology is there to stay in touch. Your family is just a phone call or email away. Get a webcam and say hi to your mom every day if you want to.

Promise yourself that you can do this. Focus on getting good grades. There is a big investment riding on your college success. Whether you got a grant or scholarship or your parents are footing the bill.....someone wants to see you succeed and grow in those ivy walls.

Go to a basketball game. Read the ads on the bulletin boards. Become alert to your new surroundings. There are kids all over this world that envy the position you are in right now.

Relax and go with it!

You can do it!

Good Luck,

C-F

2007-01-08 13:25:03 · answer #1 · answered by Crispy_Frog 4 · 1 0

that's really ordinary to be homesick once you first bypass to varsity. speeding for a sorority is an noticeably solid theory to make friends. also, there are continuously events that you'll bypass to for freshman on the initiating of the semester, so seem for those, because there'll be countless human beings there who also opt to make new friends. i became really homesick after I first moved to varsity, yet I were given over it after some weeks, so do not difficulty, it received't very last continuously. basically get entangled and take a check out to make friends, and shortly you'd be having a great time.

2016-10-17 00:25:09 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Leah, every significant life change brings difficult issues. Life changes are things like family separation, moving, births and deaths, job changes, promotions, demotions. Of course you are going to experience something when you move from your family. Quick approach...seek counseling. Bottom line...learn to love yourself as the greatest and most wonderful friend you'll ever have. Honor yourself, acknowledge how fantastic you are. If you can not only accept yourself the way you are, without judgment, but live comfortably within your own skin, then you will feel comfortable wherever you are and with anyone you may be with. A therapist might word it another way but that's the bottom line. Live yourself, the rest will come naturally. Good luck.

2007-01-08 13:14:39 · answer #3 · answered by judgebill 7 · 0 1

Your poor thing! It's normal. Hug.

I remember moving away from home (across the continent) and missing my parents and siblings. I couldn't even visit; but they're always on my mind. What helped me was writing - I wrote them lots and lots of letters. It will be OK. You'll go back to your normal routine.

Did you make any new friends? Hang out with them or take up extra curriculum will help ease your pain. You can still call and write to them.

You will be fine. Good luck sweetie!

2007-01-08 13:16:13 · answer #4 · answered by childofGod 4 · 0 0

Go back home. You can attend University in your home town. No one should have to be lonely or have to go away to learn a lesson. You only have your family. Follow your heart. I think you are so gracious, I believe in being dependent and not going a day without seeing my family, no matter how old I am. You are so young so admiral, people only wish they can be more like you.
God bless us all...

2007-01-08 13:16:01 · answer #5 · answered by lee f 5 · 0 1

asd

2007-01-08 13:11:09 · answer #6 · answered by dojorno5 2 · 0 3

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