I’d really like to get out on my own. I need to experience being independent, for once. But my parents think that a college that’s just a few hours drive from home is already too far away.
**Yes, you do need to do these things, and your parents need to learn to let go, big jobs for both of you. If your High school offers any workshops about going away to school, make sure you and parents attend. Sometimes they address this important issue. Another thing you could try is to visit your local library and check out books about the college experience. Leave them around in common spots in the home where others will browse them. Use the time you have to help everyone get familiar with the idea. If you have family friends who are also preparing for this, engage them in conversation while the family is together, get people talking about their fears, feelings, hopes, wishes and dreams in a bigger context.
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I think public universities are probably the better choice for the scientific or technical field. If I was interested in becoming a doctor or something, UCSD would be great.
But I want to be a Mental Health Counselor or Marriage & Family Therapist, and for this reason I feel that I need to go to a passionately Catholic or very conservative school. If I go to another school, I would not want to be taught how to help parents get divorced, how to help homosexuals fit into their lifestyle, etc. I would not want to be taught something that goes against everything I stand for.
**Part of growing up, and certainly part of higher education is learning things that challenge your faith and belief. You simply will have to deal with things that go against everything you stand for. That is life. That is reality.
The point of going to university is not to coddle you. The college experience will take you apart and you will have to put yourself together again. That is a part of growing up, and while it can be confusing, scary, even dangerous, it is also exhilerating, empowering and worthwhile. A good faith is a mature faith, and one of your tasks in the upcoming years, no matter where you go to school, is to mature in faith as well as other areas of life.
Being taught about these things does not mean you have to take them in as personal beliefs. Your task will be to sort the wheat from the chaff.**