Parents Ditch Teen At Boarding School, Forget She Exists, Years Later She’s Still Mad At Them
Let’s face it, school can be a drag. Annoying classmates, bullies, and teachers with personal vendettas make getting an education more miserable than it needs to be. Now imagine being trapped at a boarding school with all of that. Less than ideal, right?
One woman turned to an online community to share how her parents tricked her into going to a school for the gifted, then left her there until graduation after promising she could leave whenever she wanted to. Now, years later, she’s not sure she can ever forgive them.
More info: Reddit
School can be a less-than-ideal experience, but boarding school takes it to a whole new level
Image credits: Jomkwan / Freepik (not the actual photo)
One teen was forced to go to boarding school until graduation, despite her parents at first telling her she could leave if she didn’t like it
Image credits: pvproductions / Freepik (not the actual photo)
She was miserable at the school and cried every day for two years, shattered that her parents would just abandon her
Image credits: Getty Images / Unsplash (not the actual photo)
To make matters worse, her parents lied and told everyone she loved it at the school and was there by her own choice
Image credits: VisibleLoan7460
Now, she’s at college, but turned to netizens to share how she’s still struggling with feelings of anger towards her folks and is wondering if she’ll ever get over their betrayal
When most teens dream about freedom in high school, the original poster’s (OP) parents had other plans, and they didn’t involve choice. At just 15, her parents pressured her into applying to an elite boarding school, threatening to send her to an all-girls Catholic school if she didn’t. Thinking rejection was guaranteed, she applied.
A week later, she was accepted, and that’s when everything changed. Her parents told her she’d only have to stay for two weeks, just to “try it out.” But after those two weeks of homesickness and tears, they broke their promise. Over the phone, they told her she was staying until graduation. Her life, as she knew it, vanished overnight.
She cried every day for two years while her family moved on without her. They even got a new puppy two days after she left, one she bitterly says was meant to “replace” her. Her parents told friends and relatives she was thriving, even though she begged to come home. Her mom even made it clear to everyone: she wasn’t welcome back.
Now 19 and in college, OP’s still struggling with feelings of resentment and abandonment issues. Though she’s tried to understand her parents’ point of view, she can’t forgive how they handled it. “They took my home away from me,” she writes. “I was 15. I was a kid. And I don’t know if I’ll ever stop being quietly angry about it.”
Image credits: user23299994 / Freepik (not the actual picture)
Let’s be real here: nobody (and I mean absolutely nobody) wants to be shipped off to boarding school against their will and then basically forgotten about. OP’s parents blatantly disregarded her well-being, then, on top of that, lied to people that she was having the time of her life. What she’s going through is known as boarding school syndrome. But just what is it? We went digging for answers.
The pros over at Brighton Therapy Partnership break it down nicely: boarding school syndrome is not a medical category, but a theory that there’s an identifiable cluster of learned behaviors and emotional states that may follow growing up in boarding school, which can lead to serious psychological distress.
Here’s the thing: the ex-boarder might look totally socially confident on the surface, but underneath, there’s often a deep, permanent inability to trust. It plays out in adulthood through constant anticipation of rejection and this gnawing fear that the people you love will eventually leave you. No wonder OP is struggling, right?
As much as she’s hurting, the experts from Psychology Today say that the antidote for resentment is forgiveness, consciously remembering what happened and letting go of the pain attached to it. The best part? You can forgive others whether or not they admit to their role in hurting you.
We’re really hoping OP can work through the deep pain she’s been carrying and eventually find a way to release the anger toward her parents for what they put her through. Because holding onto that bitterness? It’s really just hurting her more.
So, what’s your take? Is OP’s anger justified? Should she try to forgive her folks for her own good? Share your thoughts in the comments!
In the comments, readers encouraged the original poster not to suffer in silence but rather to tell her parents exactly how much pain they caused her
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She only answered it in one of the comment responses, but she said she came out to her parents as gay right before they sent her away. Her Catholic parents.... I think the mystery is solved! Poor kid.
Whoa! Way to bury the lede: My religious-freak parents sent me to boarding school and forgot about me because I came out as queer.
Load More Replies...I'd keep them at a distance. Never sharing anything but the bare minimum of my life, and bide my time until my siblings were out of the house and then step back further and go low/no contact.
Do you really think life would be better being at home when they didn't want you there? It wasn't right to force boarding school, but much better than being in the house and resented. At least elite boarding schools let you bulls your own life and make plans independent of parents Is OP had been at home it would have been resentment and micro/macro agreesions every day and she would have had to rely on parents for a lot of opportunities. Don't look back enjoy college don't worry about the parents
That's horrible. Hope OP gets therapy. I agree with the "parents are abvsive" comments.
At least I knew why mine sent me (to get me out of an uncle's clutches until they could move). It must be horrible not knowing, but it sounds like the parents were originally interested in the best possible education for their child.
This is probably a case of "we know better what's good for you" which is such BS. Then it would be so much easier to think, "she'll thank us when she's older" which is also BS. The fact is, they abandoned her and lied to her. Hope she abandons them as much as possible.
NTA but OP is incredibly naive if she can't figure out that they sent her away because she came out. I'm shocked they didn't say more to her. One day it will hit her full in the face and she will finally stand up for herself and quit making excuses for them. I wish her luck without them
Parents just made it easy for OP to put them in a rest home (not sure if that's a correct word but an old folks home.)
I want to piggyback on what mslauren2930 said that too many people are taking s**t these days. We have the extremely entitled on one hand and the extremely meek on the other. The entitled ones beat down the meek more and more. If people would say something, do something, and report things when they happen, the entitled would be a lot less entitled, and hopefully the meek will learn to stand a little taller. I call it out. I don't take s**t that I don't deserve. If someone's in a bad mood, sure, I let it slide. If they're intentionally taking their bad mood out on me for no reason, then we need to have a talk.
She only answered it in one of the comment responses, but she said she came out to her parents as gay right before they sent her away. Her Catholic parents.... I think the mystery is solved! Poor kid.
Whoa! Way to bury the lede: My religious-freak parents sent me to boarding school and forgot about me because I came out as queer.
Load More Replies...I'd keep them at a distance. Never sharing anything but the bare minimum of my life, and bide my time until my siblings were out of the house and then step back further and go low/no contact.
Do you really think life would be better being at home when they didn't want you there? It wasn't right to force boarding school, but much better than being in the house and resented. At least elite boarding schools let you bulls your own life and make plans independent of parents Is OP had been at home it would have been resentment and micro/macro agreesions every day and she would have had to rely on parents for a lot of opportunities. Don't look back enjoy college don't worry about the parents
That's horrible. Hope OP gets therapy. I agree with the "parents are abvsive" comments.
At least I knew why mine sent me (to get me out of an uncle's clutches until they could move). It must be horrible not knowing, but it sounds like the parents were originally interested in the best possible education for their child.
This is probably a case of "we know better what's good for you" which is such BS. Then it would be so much easier to think, "she'll thank us when she's older" which is also BS. The fact is, they abandoned her and lied to her. Hope she abandons them as much as possible.
NTA but OP is incredibly naive if she can't figure out that they sent her away because she came out. I'm shocked they didn't say more to her. One day it will hit her full in the face and she will finally stand up for herself and quit making excuses for them. I wish her luck without them
Parents just made it easy for OP to put them in a rest home (not sure if that's a correct word but an old folks home.)
I want to piggyback on what mslauren2930 said that too many people are taking s**t these days. We have the extremely entitled on one hand and the extremely meek on the other. The entitled ones beat down the meek more and more. If people would say something, do something, and report things when they happen, the entitled would be a lot less entitled, and hopefully the meek will learn to stand a little taller. I call it out. I don't take s**t that I don't deserve. If someone's in a bad mood, sure, I let it slide. If they're intentionally taking their bad mood out on me for no reason, then we need to have a talk.































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