Episode 35 | Should Your Kid Write About the Hard Stuff?
If your teenager has been through something hard, a loss, a stretch of anxiety or depression, a family rupture, a health scare, a year that left a mark on the whole house, you have probably had a quiet thought you would never say out loud. That would make a powerful college essay. And then, right behind it, a wave of guilt for even thinking it.
This is the warm, honest conversation about that exact knot in your stomach. Lindsay, a former high school counselor turned independent college counselor and mom of two, walks parents through how to think about writing a college essay about a difficult experience. When the hard stuff makes a beautiful, memorable personal statement. When it should stay out. The real line between a genuine growth essay and what she lovingly calls a trauma dump. And how to talk to your teen about all of it without ever making their pain feel like a homework assignment.
If you are the parent of a rising junior or senior staring down the Common App personal statement this summer, this episode will take a weight off your chest.
What you'll learn in this episode:
* Why even considering your kid's hard experience as essay material does not make you exploitative, it makes you human
* The single most important mindset shift: the question is not "is this too personal," it is "does this show who my kid is now"
* The honest difference between a powerful, reflective personal statement and a trauma dump, plus a simple gut check you can use with your own kid tonight
* What college admissions readers are actually looking for, and why reflection matters far more than the event itself
* Whose story it really is, and why you can make a topic safe but should never assign it
* When a difficult experience should stay out of the personal statement, and when it belongs in the additional information section or a school counselor letter instead
* Why powerful never has to mean painful, and how some of the most memorable college essays are about the smallest, truest things
* The freeing truth that your kid is not defined by their hardest moment and is never obligated to write about it
Why this one, why now:
It is personal statement season. The Common App opens August 1, and this summer is when your rising senior actually drafts the essay that ties the whole application together. For any family carrying a hard story, this is the exact moment the should-we-or-shouldn't-we question shows up. This episode hands you a clear, compassionate way to answer it before the pressure of fall sets in.
The seven takeaways:
1. Considering the hard stuff does not make you a bad mom. It makes you a thoughtful one.
2. The event is never the point. Who your kid became is the point. Reflection over recap, always.
3. The line between a great essay and a trauma dump is the amount of genuine reflection. If the wound is too fresh to reflect on, it is too fresh to write about.
4. Your kid has to choose the topic. You make it safe, you do not assign it.
5. If they are still in the middle of the hard thing, their healing comes before any essay, and there is always another door.
6. Powerful does not require painful. The cowgirl boots prove it.
7. Your kid is not defined by the hard thing, and they are never obligated to write about it. Choosing to leave it out is a completely valid, healthy choice.
Try this with your kid this week:
Ask them to describe the hard thing in a few sentences, then keep going and tell you what they understand now that they did not understand back then. If that second part flows, with real and specific detail, the topic may be ready. If they can only circle back to describing the event itself, it is probably still too fresh, and that is completely okay. There is always another door.
A few traps to avoid:
* Assigning the topic because you can see how much your kid grew. Growth they have not chosen to share is not yours to hand them.
* Mistaking shock value for substance. The most dramatic story is not automatically the strongest essay.
* Treating the personal statement as the only place hard context can live. Often the additional information section is the smarter, kinder home for it.
* Rushing a topic that is still an open wound. Fresh pain reads as raw on the page, not reflective.
Quick questions, honest answers:
* Should my child write about mental health in their college essay? Only if they want to and have genuinely reflected on it, with the focus on growth and who they are now, not on how deep the struggle went.
* Will leaving out the hard thing hurt their chances? No. Authentic and reflective beats dramatic every time. Their best material is whatever is most honest.
* Where do I put context like a long illness or a family hardship? Usually the additional information section or a counselor letter, where it can be explained plainly and without your teen having to perform their pain.
Quotes worth screenshotting:
* "Your essay is not a report on the hardest thing that happened to you. It is a window into how you think."
* "Reflection over recap, always."
* "You cannot assign your child their own pain. You make the topic safe. You never assign it."
* "Powerful does not mean painful. The cowgirl boots prove it."
* "Your kid is not defined by the hardest thing that happened to them."
Who this episode is for:
Parents of rising juniors and seniors working on the college essay this summer, especially families where a teen has been through something heavy and you are not sure whether it belongs in the application. If you want to help with the personal statement without hovering, pushing, or accidentally making it harder, this one is for you.
A gentle note:
This episode touches on hard experiences, including grief and mental health. If your child is in the middle of something painful right now, please know that their wellbeing comes first, always, and the essay can wait. If your family is struggling, reaching out to a counselor, therapist, or trusted professional is a strong and loving next step.
Work with Lindsay:
If your kid is staring down a blank personal statement this summer, helping them find the honest, true version of their story is the work Lindsay loves most, one on one and in the Personal Statement Huddle. Reply to any of her emails or message her on social media. You will find her @thecollegecounselingmom
If you’re a parent navigating high school, college admissions, or the many transitions that come with raising teens, you’re in the right place.
I’m Lindsay, a college counselor and parent who believes thoughtful guidance matters—especially for the awesomely average kid. The student who isn’t chasing prestige, but still deserves smart planning, clear strategy, and a path that truly fits.
You can explore ways to work with me, learn about upcoming programs, or find additional resources at www.thecollegecounselingmom.com [https://www.thecollegecounselingmom.com/] and sign up for my weekly newsletter here [https://freebie.thecollegecounselingmom.com/newsletter-sign-up].
If this episode was helpful, I’d be so grateful if you’d follow the show, leave a review, or share it with another parent who could use steady, grounded support.
Thanks for being here. I’m honored to walk this season with you.
Lindsay | The College Counseling Mom