Andrew Sullivan is one of the bloggers who introduced me to the medium about a decade ago. The others are Mickey Kaus, Megan McArdle, and Glenn Reynolds. All are extraordinary talents, and I’ve learned a lot from their writing and watching the evolution of their Web sites. It’s The Daily Dish that has changed the most. Nowadays it has daily features like A View From Your Window, it operates at a relentless pace like a broadcast, it features Andrew Sullivan’s extended takes on numerous issues, and it acts as a curatorial resource for a readership that is as thoughtful as any I’ve ever experienced. Past stints guest blogging at The Daily Dish afforded a close look at its reader e-mails, and it’s truly a pleasure to interact with a large online community of intelligent, delightfully diverse readers who are open to persuasion, rather than looking to consume only material that regurgitates what they already believe or else advances their ideological team.
In this new gig, I’ll mostly be working on the curatorial aspect of The Daily Dish. In other words, I’ll be getting paid to find exceptionally good writing and arguments on the Internet, so that an eager audience of thoughtful people can be exposed to them. That prospect is enormously appealing. Public discourse should function as a crucible, where ideas are tested, the best emerge strengthened, and the worst are destroyed. I also miss finding talented writers whose work deserves a wider audience. That was the biggest pleasure of being features editor at Culture11. In coming months, I hope I can alert Andrew and his readership to new voices.
Despite our differences on various specific matters, Andrew Sullivan and I share a commitment to an ongoing public conversation characterized by forceful disagreements, the airing of dissent, and a vision of readers as rational, mature, intelligent interlocutors. It’s why The Daily Dish is a good fit at The Atlantic, and why I revere that institution. Is there any other venue where the folks in charge are as likely to link and excerpt the most forceful arguments contrary to their own? And we’re all writing in the spirit “of no party or clique.” As The Daily Dish continues to evolve, I trust that core aspect will remain a constant. As a result, I can contribute to a site whose ongoing success and constant improvement I very much desire, even as I pursue outside writing dictated entirely by what I think is right. When that happens to be in disagreement with Mr. Sullivan, who is never one to shy away from an argument, that probably just increases the chances that it’ll get linked.
OK–the big day has arrived (or almost). Know that you have done your job. Your goal is for them to be happy, safe, well-adjusted and content. As you pull away from campus after hugs and good byes, it’s going to be up to that son or daughter to make proper decisions and to move in the right direction.
Your job isn’t done — but you will no longer have the same power to fix things or influence them on a daily basis. Their new friends and the entire college experience will shape them. All we can really do is hope for the very best for our adult child.
So what can you expect, how should you behave and what might surprise you? Here are some nuggets of advice from parents who have been there:
For The Homesick Child (And You)
Look at the calendar and mentally break the academic year into chunks of 6 or 8 weeks between the various long and short breaks or visits from you: Mid semester, Parents Weekend, Thanksgiving, Christmas, etc. This is also helpful for the family that misses their child! They are home way more than you imagine.
Setting Up The Room
Parents offered conflicting advice on room set-up. Some of it depended on gender. But again, you know your kid best.
One piece of advice was universal — Get to the dorm as soon as it’s legal. The early bird actually does get the best bunk. If you lose out, you can suggest switching at the end of first semester.
Be prepared for aggressive parents who might have a different style. One Mom wrote — “I moved Anna into a room for three girls. We were not supposed to go to the room until 10:00 am Sunday morning. But one girl and her mother-from-hell managed to get in the night before and they made up the single room bed with her stuff and took over the drawers they wanted. Nice start! I wanted to rip their faces off — but I held my tongue.”
“Setting up the room with my daughter took us almost an entire day to get it just right. My son took 2 hours!!”
“When you arrive at college with your new student, don’t stick around. Be ready to leave when it’s time to go. Let them set up their own rooms including making their own beds. They love that you’ve helped, now move along so they can get down to settling in their way and meet new friends.”
“Busy yourself in the room making the bed – it will be the last time it will have clean sheets until spring when you rip them off and throw them out. I told my son that his face will break out in massive zits if he didn’t change the pillow case. So maybe that means it made to the wash three times?”
Some Final Words Of Wisdom For Them
The Final Goodbye
Be ready to get teary, but try to hold off actual full-on sobbing until you are alone in the car. You don’t want to have them lose “street cred” by making them tear up too.
On drop-off day, I had expected to stay into the afternoon and attend an ice cream party for freshman kids and parents. My husband had left earlier and so it was just the two of us at the party. While my son was being polite, I could tell he was chomping at the bit to be set “free” from the parental/child conversation and go off with his new roommate. I ended up leaving campus 2 hours earlier than planned. He walked me to the car, I fought back tears, put on the shades and with a big hug, was out of there. You will know when its time to go. Be prepared to be flexible.
Lastly, the trip home will be long. A few Moms described needing to pull over to the side of the road to cry. Resist the urge to call them from the car. Let them call you if they want to hear your voice. My advice? Get a good book on tape.
Souls Enhanced has changed our format to more of an informative blog setup. We hope you will enjoy the coming changes and I personally think that you will find this format much more user friendly, informative, and fun to visit on a daily basis.
Thanks for all of your support,
The Editorial Team of Souls Enhanced