Campus Advisor
by Linda Bates Parker
Dear
Campus Advisor:
I am from what my sociology professor would call a truly dysfunctional
family. My mom is a longtime drug
abuser. My two brothers are in
jail. My grandmother, who partially
raised me, is very ill. There are
other members of my family, but for each there is a long story and many
challenges. I graduate from college in June. I currently have a 3.0 average in computer science and am
considering graduate school, but I also have interviewed for some full-time
jobs, with excellent salary and benefits. I
have received loans and have had to work constantly to pay for my education.
Despite the hardships and difficulties I have faced, I’m going to make
it after all, as they say.
Here’s my
problem. This may seem like a small
matter in the scheme of things, and I haven’t discussed this with anyone else,
but I am feeling really sad about my graduation, because I don’t have any
family that I think can or will come. I
know all my classmates will have their family members there and it feels like my
high school graduation all over again; me, alone in the crowd of happy families.
Don’t get me wrong, I’m happy to be able to graduate and I will be
there. I know even if I invite my
mom, she may not show up and if she does, I may be totally humiliated if she
comes strung out. Should I invite her and take the risk or should I go it alone
and have a Big Mac dinner after the ceremony by myself?
Wrestling
with life in Michigan
The name was withheld at the writer’s request.
This letter was submitted before graduation in spring 2000.
Dear Wrestling with Life:
You’ve been wrestling through a lot of rounds in your
life thus far, and you keep winning. So you will win at this moment of decision
as well. Think about it.
You can’t predict anyone else’s behavior and you certainly have
enough past experiences to know that you may or may not be able to count on your
family at graduation. So don’t
set yourself up for a setback.
Expect and assume nothing, but by all means, invite your
mother and your grandmother. Understand
and anticipate that they may not be there.
Take great joy in sending out your graduation invitations to other family
members, friends, former teachers and anyone else who has been a support system
for you at some point in your life. Reflect
on how proud they will be, even if they don’t show it, that one did leap over
your dysfunctional family circumstances and graduate from college.
They will, in their hearts, shed tears of joy; not only for your
outstanding achievements, but because they may not be in a position to be there
in person with you. You will feel
their presence, despite their possible absence. If your mother does come,
remember she will be in a large crowd of happy celebrants. It may be a turning
point for her and for you. She
may be on her best behavior, you never know.
But if not, remember, her behavior may seem glaring to you, but may be
inconsequential and unapparent to others. Just
do not focus on it. Let nothing
destroy the moment for you. Keep
focused on how great it feels to have achieved something pretty spectacular in
your young life. Give yourself a
lot of private, personal praise and march proudly in the commencement line and
cherish the day.
Now, there is something else you might want to consider.
Why not invite, to be among your guests, people on campus who have been
supportive of you – faculty who care, a counselor, an advisor, a residence
hall staff member, undergraduate friends, maybe a member of your church family,
etc. By now, people close to you
probably have some sense of your family challenges. Certain things are apparent, especially to counselors, even
if you have not shared much with them. You
may want to confide in them; maybe not, that is really up to you.
But consider it. I am certain that there would be people on campus who would
consider it an honor to be there to support and celebrate with you.
After all, seeing young African-American men and women stubbornly persist
against the odds, and graduate in higher education, is one of the most rewarding
experiences of being an academician, especially as an African American.
Just try to have people surrounding you on that special day, who will
join you in making this one of the most exciting days of your life.
Participate in all of the senior celebrations so that you can experience
full measure the significance of your considerable achievements.
Wish I could be there with you!
Linda Bates Parker is the director of the Career
Development Center at the University of Cincinnati.
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