The College Counseling Mom Podcast: It’s Fine, I’m Fine, My Kid’s in High School.
Picture it: dinner table, and your well-meaning person lobs another "what about writing about your Eagle Scout project?" across the table while your kid slides so far down in their chair they're basically eating horizontal. Friend, I have lived this exact scene, in my own kitchen, with my husband Jeff and our son Jake. If "how's the essay going" has become a fighting word in your house, this one's for you. I'm walking you through how to actually help your teen with the personal statement without writing it for them: the do's, the don'ts, and the simple brainstorm-and-story-chunks system that finally got Jake to sit up straight. It's the same one I use with my own students. Spoiler: your real job here is so much lighter than you think. Here's what we get into: * Why handing your kid a topic, even a brilliant one, makes them freeze * The DO list: brainstorm together, ask better questions, proofread the commas * The DON'T list: rewrite it, make it sound 45, or touch the actual content * The "story chunks" trick that beats a blank page every time * Why disappearing supplemental essays make the personal statement matter even more * Your actual job in all of this (hint: it's not "writer") Why this one, why now: Common App opens August 1, and summer is the window to get the essay drafted before the school-year chaos hits. This one hands you a calm way to help, starting tonight. Go ahead and screenshot these: * "You can fix the commas. You cannot fix the story." * "The fix isn't a better topic. It's getting out of the driver's seat." * "Seventeen is supposed to sound like seventeen." * "Your job isn't to be the writer. It's to be the guide." Try this this week: Sit down with your teen and ask one open question, not "what's your topic." Try "tell me about a time you surprised yourself." Then zip it and just listen. That's the whole brainstorm. This episode is for you if: your dinner table has turned into a standoff over this essay, and you're stuck between wanting to help and accidentally making it worse. A few honest answers to what you're probably Googling: * How do I help without writing it? Brainstorm together, ask open questions, proofread typos and grammar only. Don't touch the content or the voice. * What if my teen is totally stuck? Stop asking for "the essay." Ask for one small story chunk at a time. Small and specific beats big and overwhelming. * Do colleges care if a parent helped? They can smell an adult-written essay, and it works against your kid. Help with the process, not the words. Come do this with me, free: I'm walking parents through this exact system live at my free workshop, Tuesday July 1 at 8 PM. Register and you'll leave with a real plan and a lot less dread. https://coaching.thecollegecounselingmom.com/application-webinar-sign-up 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
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