What I Wish I Knew Before Sending My Daughter to America
Carolina R.
Parent from Colombia
I am writing this for every mother who is lying awake at 2 AM wondering if she's making the right decision. I was you. Two years ago, I put my 16-year-old daughter on a plane to Virginia and watched her walk through security, and I thought my heart would stop. Here is what I wish someone had told me then.
I Wish I Knew That the Guilt Would Be Real — and Normal
In Colombia, family is everything. We don't send our children away at 16. My mother thought I was crazy. My sister said I was being selfish. My friends at church looked at me like I was abandoning my daughter.
The guilt was crushing in the beginning. Every time Valentina called me and sounded tired or frustrated, I questioned everything. Was I doing this for her, or for me? Was I pushing her too hard? Was I trying to give her opportunities I never had, without asking if she actually wanted them?
Here's what I wish I'd known: the guilt is normal. It doesn't mean you're doing the wrong thing. It means you love your child and you're scared. Both of those things are okay. The guilt doesn't go away completely, but it does get quieter — especially when you start seeing your child grow in ways you never imagined.
I Wish I Knew That Communication Would Be Complicated
I thought we would video call every day. We didn't. In the first month, Valentina was so busy with orientation, classes, and making friends that sometimes I wouldn't hear from her for two or three days. I panicked every time.
I learned — the hard way — that I needed to trust the process and give her space. We settled into a rhythm: one long video call on Sundays, a few texts during the week, and the understanding that silence usually meant she was busy, not in trouble.
The hardest moment was when she forgot to call me on my birthday. I cried for an hour. Then she called the next morning, apologized, and told me she'd been studying for a biology exam. She was being a normal teenager. I had to learn to let that be enough.
I Wish I Knew How Much She Would Change
The daughter who left Bogota was shy, dependent, and uncertain about everything from what to wear to what to study. The young woman who came home for Christmas six months later was someone I barely recognized — in the best possible way.
She was making her own decisions. She was managing her own schedule. She was advocating for herself with teachers. She had opinions about politics, about food, about what she wanted to study in college. She had a confidence I'd never seen before.
And it was bittersweet. Because the growth I wanted for her also meant she didn't need me in the same way anymore. That's the part nobody prepares you for. You send them away so they can grow — and then you have to accept that growth means they're becoming their own person, not a smaller version of you.
I Wish I Knew That the School Would Actually Care
I was terrified that Valentina would be just another student — a number in the system, invisible to the adults who were supposed to be watching over her. I was wrong.
Her school in Virginia was small, and the teachers and dorm parents genuinely knew her. Her advisor emailed me updates every month. When Valentina struggled in chemistry, her teacher stayed after school to work with her. When she had a conflict with her roommate, the dorm parent sat them both down and helped them work it out.
I wish I'd known how much it would matter to have people on the ground who cared about my child. It didn't replace me being there, but it meant I wasn't doing this alone.
I Wish I Knew That She Would Want to Stay
This is the one nobody warns you about. After her junior year, Valentina told me she wanted to stay for senior year. After senior year, she told me she wanted to go to university in the U.S. I had expected her to come home. Instead, she built a life there.
I'd be lying if I said I wasn't heartbroken at first. I dreamed of her attending university in Bogota, living nearby, coming home for lunch on Sundays. Instead, she's 3,000 miles away, thriving, and calling me on Sundays from a dorm room I've never seen.
But here's what I've come to understand: the goal was never for her to come back the same. The goal was for her to become someone who could go anywhere in the world and make it her home. And she did. That's not loss — that's success.
What I'd Tell You Right Now
If you're considering this for your child, here's my advice:
- Talk to your child honestly. Don't just tell them it will be great. Tell them it will be hard, and tell them you believe they can handle it.
- Find an advisor you trust. Having someone who knew the schools personally and could answer my questions at 11 PM (because of the time difference) was invaluable. Global Link Advisors was that for us.
- Prepare yourself, not just your child. You are going through a transition too. Find other parents who've done this. Talk to them. They'll understand what your friends at home won't.
- Let go of the picture you had in your head. Your child's path may not look like what you imagined. That doesn't mean it's wrong. It might be better.
My daughter is the bravest person I know. And the hardest thing I ever did — putting her on that plane — turned out to be the best thing I ever did for her.
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