Me thinks you may have “painted both sides of the fence” my boy. |
| I do NOT consider being drunk and high for 4.5 years the best time of my life. Should have started my freshman year in my mid to late 20s. Perhaps I could/would have learned something. |
|
Engineering School was just a whole lot of hard work. It still is today. From colleagues who went to E School everywhere from MIT to Pungo Tech I hear the same story.
Were there some good moments, sure, but most of the time it was just a lot of hard work. |
This. It was a hard process that led to a great career, and there was fun but it was not the most fun 4 yrs ever. That would be kind of sad to be done with the most fun at 22 |
| Definitely not for me. I worked almost full time hours on top of school, lived off campus, didn't drink, was involved in one club, and was just there to get the degree. There were aspects I enjoyed and I made some good friends but I also couldn't wait to be done and get out into the real world. |
|
I loved my college years! Those memories will forever be special. I’m so thankful that I was open to new experiences and new people. I truly loved it. I love that my DS is having the same attitude and having a great experience already!
|
| I had a great time. It was the first tast of independence and it was also a place that allowed me to build confidence. However, it was not the best time of my life. I loved my late 20s when I disposable income and had the ability to travel without many constraints. |
|
I think this is something that some people (there's privilege involved here) say in retrospect. For a lot of middle-upper middle class people, college was special in-between time when we got to play grown ups without real fears and responsibilities. Compared to the real deal of being a grown up or the lack of freedom of being a kid, that sounds like the definition of fun. Also, the ease of making new friends part, for a lot of people, is unmatched.
I loved and sometimes hated my college years. I studies really hard and did very well academically. I had some great and not great social experiences. Socially, for me the most fun time of my life was definitely my late 20s. But the most meaningful and cherished (and super hard and exhausting), no question started once I got married and had family. |
|
It was NOT the best 4 years of my life - actually, it was miserable. I worked, studied hard, took lots of credits, dealt with romantic breakups, the death of family members, lack of a real friend group. I pushed myself hard to get out in 4 years because I was so miserable. I remember being exhausted, emotionally drained, sick (mono, strep) and yet .....
I got a great education, learned about myself, and felt accomplished. But I did not enjoy the experience. Looking back, and thinking about our kids going through this - there was so much pressure to make it great that didn't help expectations and reality. I was so relieved to have it over I never, ever wanted to look back. I haven't been back to campus since I graduated, I only have a few friends from that period. I found life after college a much better experience. |
I had rental houses right off campus at UMD for 35 years. Just finished selling the last one. Kids are nowhere near as fun or happy as they were before. Dropped a little every year since 2000ish. The parents are all over everything and the kids are more helpless regarding survival plus have zero sense of adventure / humor / imagination. There are exceptions of course but it used to be the norm. I predict a big change in the whole college organization because it’s become more miserable, less developmental and exponentially more expensive. |
I warned my DC about douchebags like you. |
Douchebags Furries Nerds Allergy kids ADHD types Gangbangers Prim and proper Slobs Helicopter parent weaklings Diversity is our strength |
Left out blue hair nose ring types |
This was the case for me, but there were definitely growing pains along the way. DH and I really talked up college to our kid but his experience hasn’t been great and we regret selling it the way we did. Should’ve been more balanced in our approach. Freedom and few responsibilities doesn’t always translate into a great experience. |
| A college is designed to be an enlightened resort paradise. Some else is paying, cooking, cleaning, and driving for the few things not in walking distance. Minimal obligations except to focus on building up yourself however you want. Everyone is near their peak of sexual desire and desirability and peak physical health. |