<p>The daughter should know, in advance, that it is very, very common to be homesick and miserable the first semester of college. Spring semester seems to bring a lot of improvements in that regard. It takes some emotional perseverance to get through the first few months. Will she have that kind of perseverance once in Colorado? Indecision doesn’t necessarily mean immaturity or lack of will.</p>
<p>Colorado has more pros, and fewer cons, including the academics and support available.</p>
<p>San Diego offers an emotional transition through boyfriend/friend, sort of “transitional objects” that might help her leave home, but once that first semester is over, she may not need that. The business program is a plus but it sounds like she isn’t as interested. She may be undecided about her academic focus at this point.</p>
<p>Objectively, the answer would be Colorado. In fact, that impossibility of transferring there might make starting there a wise idea, with the possibility still remaining, perhaps of transferring to San Diego if she wants. (Does San Diego take sophomore transfers? Would she get in for sure?)</p>
<p>Subjectively, for a kid like this, I think the presence of familiar people, including the BF, might be really, really helpful. There is nothing wrong with that at all. I know of one student whose high school BF went to school nearby and even lived with her. They both had a secure base from which to explore academics, extracurriculars and other friends. In the final year, when they had both achieved more maturity and grown a lot, they broke up!</p>
<p>I think it would be better to go to San Diego and have a secure start rather than go to Colorado and possibly be so homesick and lonely that the kinds of growth and exploration that might happen closer to home and BF, won’t happen. But the parent can judge that, and conversations with the daughter might center on this. </p>
<p>Psychic energy is limited- for all of us. Making a big move away from home costs a lot of psychic energy, and having some familiar people around might help preserve enough psychic energy to get a really solid start.</p>
<p>If the relationship with BF is full of drama or negativity, that is a different story. Dependency can be a natural way of coping with this stressful transition and it may morph into something more healthy once the move is made. You and your daughter might be able to assess this together.</p>
<p>Some kids move away from home gradually. I actually know several who spent their first year going home on weekends. Others actually live home, or go away and come back to live home. And 82% apparently end up home after graduating! Our culture’s emphasis on independence can be harmful to some, but standing one one’s own two feet is good even for someone who is more into interdependence.</p>