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star_0

Member
Jan 15, 2026
59
hello, im a college freshman and im having a terrible 2nd semester, i've missed more classes than i can count and ive basically failed or missed every homework and exam. i dont care about college or my major but it'd be a huge waste of money for me to fail out. i would also get punished by my family. i dont know why its so hard for me to work. i am very slothful and lazy and i really hate myself for it. if i keep going on this path im sure to fail every class im in. very scared about my future. how do i help myself? i dont have any friends that are willing to aid me
 
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daruino

odi et amo
Nov 9, 2025
124
Hey, I mean- no one can help you with your homework and exams- you will need to be able to do it yourself to get a degree. I imagine it also gets increasingly difficult to start with the schoolwork since you've missed so much- it amplifies itself. I guess I can only advise you to make a choice: either go for it and do your best or don't- but get yourself out of this middle path of doing nothing. It's true what you say about it being a waste of money but you also need to be realistic. It's not just about passing your classes now, but keeping this up. If you're a freshman you have 3-4 more years to go, right? If you don't care about college or your major- then that's going to be unbearable for you. Somewhere you're going to need to find some sort of motivation to keep you going- whether that be for what you're currently doing or pursuing something you actually want. Goodluck! And you are definitely not a failure or deserving of any punishment for this.
 
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yotaka

明日にはすべてが終るとして
Jan 29, 2026
155
Are you at a university? If so, utilize the resources there: talk to your academic advisor, any available counseling services, career services, etc. Be honest with them. Let them know your issues and, if they can't help you, ask them to point you in the direction of someone who can.
 
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whyyyyyyyy

Student
May 26, 2020
116
This exact same situation happened to me, it seems very common. I got soooo lazy. It's very difficult to adjust to living on your own, in terms of running your own life, motivating yourself, plus work is kinda harder once you hit college, so it's a lot at once. Plus it's the first time you're free from parental supervision, so it's verrrrrry difficult to be focused, so just know that this is a big step you're adjusting to and a lot of normal people kinda have a freshman burnout crisis.

First, I would say if you're having any issues with excessive drinking/drug use that's sort of causing the crisis, try to stop that entirely if possible and get help if necessary. Marijuana and alcohol really sabotaged my attention and kept me stuck in a total doom spiral on top of the situation you describe, so that's not good.

Second, I would agree with Yotaka, what you need right now is a caring, helpful adult to help you get under control. If I were in this situation again, I would carefully pick someone older and responsible to open up to and help me solve my problem. Otherwise you're just trying to manage it on your own, and it's just so overwhelming, you feel so tired, guilty, it's too much for anybody to manage. Try to find some adult who, if you're really struggling, will sit and listen to you cry. Maybe it's a teaching assistant, or a teacher, or advisor. Meet in person over Zoom, because you need support, online interactions don't stop you from feeling isolated.

Also important to know is a lot of campus mental health services are abysmal and useless, so try it out but don't necessarily count on it.

That older person is just who you need to help get you sorted. I would also try to just tell some person on campus so you don't feel alone and have someone to talk to.

Try to start going to bed and waking up on time, try to go to class, all that. But also bottom line BIG ADVICE I wish I had followed- if you can't easily fix this on your own, prepare to share it with your parents that you're struggling. The earlier you do it the more understanding they'll be, and the longer you wait and hide it, the more likely they'll be somewhat upset, because if you are struggling, assuming they want the best for you, they'd want you to get help with that as soon as possible.

I know it feels like if you tell your parents you're messing up in school, you will literally die, it feels like the biggest blackest doom thing that you want to avoid at all costs. That's why I recommend finding some adult on campus who you can befriend and be pretty open with and is really a nice person and will support you. That's kind of rare to come by, but try to pick a good one, just someone who seems nice, maybe a counselor, maybe a TA. And maybe this person can help you talk to your parents, because it will show that you're serious about changing things, but you're generally overwhelmed and struggling, and they'll believe it and be less mad if you involve a responsible adult who can defend you and sees this a lot and will back you up.

Like straight up, tell the counselor I'm worried about flunking out/getting put on probation, and I'm absolutely terrified about telling my parents, and see what they say.

Now, I would avoid bothering your parents by crying to them that you're totally failing IF POSSIBLE, with help and discipline on your own. It is a real hassle to go through this confession with your parents because they'll trust you less for a while potentially, and it's just a pain to work to restore your reputation. BUT it's a BIGGER pain to try to restore your parents' trust after hiding academic difficulty for a long time while wasting more and more of their money. Don't avoid telling your parents out of fear of confrontation and waste their money in the process. Don't snitch on yourself if you really can avoid it, but be smart, you might have to at some point. I think I wish I had gotten the third party adult to confide in about my problems, because it feels like a tsunami of fear to deal with this on your own or just with your parents.

Another thing with missing classes is- be afraid of how quickly your patience for doing school diminishes. Assuming you had to try in high school to get into college, maybe not, but regardless it's important to know: Just a few months of not doing school makes it exponentially harder to get the motivation and discipline to go back and keep up with school tasks. You (you meaning all humans) get soooo lazy soooo quickly. Once you've tasted not doing school, it becomes much harder to start it up again. Be aware of that, the rate of decay is insane. Try just showing up to class and being present, don't put pressure on yourself to take notes or understand, but start with the baby step of showing up and casually listening.

But seriously, to summarize, this situation is a ticking time bomb because of how much harder it gets to do school again the longer you don't do it, and also if you wait too long to tell your parents or otherwise resolve things, that also makes it corresponding degrees of worse. You are probably just overwhelmed with stress, guilt, exhaustion, sloth, and it's just very very difficult. Take a breath, you're not a bad person or anything, this burnout is really common. Like just forgive yourself for being in a hard situation. Be easy on yourself and don't carry a big weight on yourself for this. But also, don't avoid, seek some way to get out of this pit you're kinda stuck in right now, and I think the easiest way is to be honest with someone who will help you manage this very overwhelming situation. It's scary to be honest, but you'll be relieved. Don't hide and avoid, it's getting worse if you do that more. Find a chill TA, teacher or counselor, and just say, "hey I am kind of struggling academically and could really use some help to navigate it". And someone will really want to help, and you feel crushed anymore by having it all on your back. Find someone nice though who seems like they give a fuck and will relate to you as a person and not a number. Take action to solve this bad feeling you're in.

The alternative is what I did, where I just told no one, became terminally depressed and stressed out, and literally went insane, because I was too ashamed and scared to tell anyone, and couldn't admit to myself that it was just too much to try and fix on my own. I made good efforts to hustle and fix it on my own, but it's not necessary. You went from being a child living at home with your family to protect you to a scary, overwhelming, independence. This crashout is so normal and understandable in that respect. If your parents aren't crazy they'll understand, assuming you really want to turn things around. It's also possible you just don't want to do college, which might be the case, idk if you're one of those people for whom the whole childhood was based around college.

Definitely rambling, but in summary- just try not to hold this struggle all inside of yourself and manage it by yourself, don't do nothing about it, talk to someone so you can at least get the awful feeling off your chest and think a little more clearly (world of difference, just do it), and last resort- talk to your parents with third party if that's necessary. I get trying to fix it before your parents find out, but if that's not going to be possible, don't prolong it more than necessary.
 
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star_0

Member
Jan 15, 2026
59
Somewhere you're going to need to find some sort of motivation to keep you going- whether that be for what you're currently doing or pursuing something you actually want.
i dont have any reason to be here but i dont think i need motivation to do work, a lot of people dont like their jobs, the problem is that i am lazy and bad
talk to your academic advisor, any available counseling services, career services, etc
so i talked to my academic advisor and they said they dont know what to do for me, i cant go to counseling because they would put me in an institution or report me or something

Second, I would agree with Yotaka, what you need right now is a caring, helpful adult to help you get under control. If I were in this situation again, I would carefully pick someone older and responsible to open up to and help me solve my problem. Otherwise you're just trying to manage it on your own, and it's just so overwhelming, you feel so tired, guilty, it's too much for anybody to manage. Try to find some adult who, if you're really struggling, will sit and listen to you cry. Maybe it's a teaching assistant, or a teacher, or advisor.
i shouldve said this in the post but no one irl is willing to help me and i have to do this alone so i cant just ask for help, no one would listen to me cry
prepare to share it with your parents that you're struggling
i cannot do this at all

just try not to hold this struggle all inside of yourself and manage it by yourself, don't do nothing about it, talk to someone so you can at least get the awful feeling off your chest
i dont want it to seem like im dismissing this advice but i cant do most of these things i would explain my circumstances but it would take forever and i dont think anyone wants to read that
 
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star_0

Member
Jan 15, 2026
59
it might already be over, my professor reported me for being danger of failing, i have 2 major exams today i know im going to bomb, i dont think im smart enough to be here
 
Y

yotaka

明日にはすべてが終るとして
Jan 29, 2026
155
so i talked to my academic advisor and they said they dont know what to do for me, i cant go to counseling because they would put me in an institution or report me or something
How certain are you that you would be put in an institution or reported? And why would you want to avoid it? (I'm not trying to push you any specific direction with these questions—just talking through it).
 
P

petmom

Member
Sep 5, 2025
39
Thi sounds a bit like me first year second semester (winter) of uni. I withdrew from 2 out of 5 classes and did poorly on the rest. Then in spring I got a nice F that was obviously my fault. Fun memory

Is it possible to withdraw from classes at your uni? Try searching for your schools policy or asking about that option. You could attempt some sort of extenuating circumstance withdrawal.

Also in the future semesters for some time you could try reducing course load so it's easier to manage.

Also I need to mention, first year is definitely most forgiving time to mess up. Plenty of people have worst first years. Some even fail classes, or fail multiple. It's bad but you can recover. But one has to reflect on what went wrong and how to avoid repeating it.

Going to counseling as a suicidal person does not equal getting reported an institutionalized instantly. I was recently too honest with one counsellor reason but it was fine. Just make sure that you don't share anything that might hint that you're going to do it any time soon. Also you could use words like hopeless and lost instead of suicidal, or you could avoid talking about methods if that's how far it's gone, etc.
 
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star_0

Member
Jan 15, 2026
59
How certain are you that you would be put in an institution or reported? And why would you want to avoid it?
i dont trust mental health services at all, they are eager to hurt or trap people with the slightest mention of suicide. if i told them i wanted to hurt myself i think they would take me somewhere or at least tell my parents which is still really bad. i want to avoid it because the absence would make my grades worse and i've heard that they mistreat inpatients regularly, also it would lead to a talk with my family

Is it possible to withdraw from classes at your uni?
i could but it'd leave a mark on my record also idk if i'd be allowed to stay in my dorm. theres a certain requirement to live here. i'd be taking less classes if i could but i dont want to go back home and im already behind
 
W

whyyyyyyyy

Student
May 26, 2020
116
i dont have any reason to be here but i dont think i need motivation to do work, a lot of people dont like their jobs, the problem is that i am lazy and bad

so i talked to my academic advisor and they said they dont know what to do for me, i cant go to counseling because they would put me in an institution or report me or something


i shouldve said this in the post but no one irl is willing to help me and i have to do this alone so i cant just ask for help, no one would listen to me cry

i cannot do this at all


i dont want it to seem like im dismissing this advice but i cant do most of these things i would explain my circumstances but it would take forever and i dont think anyone wants to read that
Tell me, I'll listen. I went through this exact bullshit, went into a dark age for about 5 years, but now I'm stable, graduated, working a good job, healthy, making good money. I will listen, let me be the older, responsible, non-judgmental, supportive friend. Surely there is something that can be helped by talking it out. Shoot me a message. Or post in the thread, If you explain more people might offer some helpful insight. It's key to get out of this panic stage you're in where it feels like there's nowhere to turn and you're screwed forever. It's not true, you could think your way out of this, this thing you're in right now will pass.
 
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Karrikin

Karrikin

Vocat aestus in umbram
Nov 3, 2024
99
I'm in the same situation right now sort of. Second semester freshman and with my attempt to CTB I stopped caring about grades altogether, been having an extreme sloth feeling to the point where I basically skipped school for like 2 weeks in total. Now it's March and one of my grades is a 30 for reference. But they can be made up, grades aren't some fixed thing. I know you mentioned not wanting to reach out for help because it might result in institutionalized outcomes but those aren't surefire things, this might be a case of "you don't know until you try" (sorry if that sounds dismissive but it's the best way I can put it). If campus resources aren't on your list though, there might be a way for you to ask about student health insurance and be referred to outside help.

**important to note, that last bit of advice is only what I know from my situation so it might vary a lot for you.

Just remember, you have not failed and you're doing the right thing in trying to at least acknowledge you need this even if the process might look different for you. You are still here, in school, and trying, I commend you for that and I wish you the best :heart:.
 
P

petmom

Member
Sep 5, 2025
39
i dont trust mental health services at all, they are eager to hurt or trap people with the slightest mention of suicide. if i told them i wanted to hurt myself i think they would take me somewhere or at least tell my parents which is still really bad. i want to avoid it because the absence would make my grades worse and i've heard that they mistreat inpatients regularly, also it would lead to a talk with my family


i could but it'd leave a mark on my record also idk if i'd be allowed to stay in my dorm. theres a certain requirement to live here. i'd be taking less classes if i could but i dont want to go back home and im already behind

As you're in first year, the consequences for having a withdraw on your transcript are not as bad. It's almost always better than an F since you won't damage your GPA. Also, people withdraw from classes all the time, and the average persons transcript is far from perfect. However please research school policy and/or talk to advising or find what other people say, before making such decisions. Check what the policy at your dorm is for to maintain full time status, or be able to live there, etc

I wouldn't worry too much about being behind in first year. And, it's better than failing. You can take summer classes, pass/fail a class if that's an option at your uni, improve habits or seek support in the future, take an extra year or semester, do all of the above and so much more. Taking longer even has benefits like more time to try get internships (despite the spotty transcript!), reduced stress and easier course load and a more pleasant experience overall. At my university, taking 5 years for a 4 year degree is common.

University is really rough when you also have mental health issues. I'm sorry you're going through this
 
etherealgoddess

etherealgoddess

perseverance is inevitable success
Dec 8, 2022
301
hello, im a college freshman and im having a terrible 2nd semester, i've missed more classes than i can count and ive basically failed or missed every homework and exam. i dont care about college or my major but it'd be a huge waste of money for me to fail out. i would also get punished by my family. i dont know why its so hard for me to work. i am very slothful and lazy and i really hate myself for it. if i keep going on this path im sure to fail every class im in. very scared about my future. how do i help myself? i dont have any friends that are willing to aid me
Meds meds meds
 
star_0

star_0

Member
Jan 15, 2026
59
Tell me, I'll listen. I went through this exact bullshit, went into a dark age for about 5 years, but now I'm stable, graduated, working a good job, healthy, making good money. I will listen, let me be the older, responsible, non-judgmental, supportive friend. Surely there is something that can be helped by talking it out.
i appreciate you but i am a complete mess and theres too much to divulge no one can help me with my problems, would rather not burden anyone with my bs

Meds meds meds
idek how people get prescriptions for anything
 
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etherealgoddess

etherealgoddess

perseverance is inevitable success
Dec 8, 2022
301
i appreciate you but i am a complete mess and theres too much to divulge no one can help me with my problems, would rather not burden anyone with my bs


idek how people get prescriptions for anything
Doctor.
 
pyamu

pyamu

love u so much u guys r the only nice ones left
Dec 14, 2021
45
Talk to your PCP and explore medication options? If you feel like you can't do anything else, that might be the only option.
 

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