My recently graduated DS said the known cheaters (so many including committed athletes) really are successful in college admittance. It's a hard lesson for the honest kids. |
| Just accept the fact that life is not fair. Some kids no earlier where they will go to college, some kids will get into higher ranked school’s than yours. Neither of these things matter in the grands scheme of things. Just remember that life is a long term game and as the saying goes, s/he who dies with the most toys wins. |
So much this. But I reject more social media follow requests that I accept. If you won’t play a current role in my life or you aren’t a relative or someone I’d want to have lunch with, you aren’t on my feed. So many of these kids I’ve known since kindergarten orientation. Or, I’ve known their parents since I was in HS or college. I care about these kids and loved seeing where they landed. Great results for great kids I’d know for a decade made me happy. I never saw it as a zero sum game. Plus, we put in the time and thought on my own kids college lists. Even the safeties would have been good place for them. I was anxious when decisions came in, but Imdidnt spend the whole year being anxious, because even plan C was a good plan. And they both landed at ideal colleges *for them*. That said, I am pulling away from social media about now until November because the election stuff does upset me sometime. If social media is a net negative in your life, be an adult and stay off of it. |
This doesn’t mean the of majority of the team is white. For example, the men’s tennis team is more than half South or East Asian. |
|
You might consider therapy, meditation or volunteer work?
If half of your brain is jealous, petty and competitive…don’t you think you have probably already had a negative effect on how your children think/feel? |
Yeah, being an athletic recruit just is a different timeline and experience. I don’t know that it is better or easier overall, but it does make for a less stressful winter. Plenty of stress earlier, when other kids aren’t thinking about college choices, though. My kid just committed to a college, and he announced it on Instagram, as did his coaches. But in all likelihood the school he is going to is a safety for your kid. He parlayed his love and skill in this sport into a bump in his chances of getting into this school. If you were to look at the schools athletic recruits actually go to, I think you’ll find that many aren’t prestigious, envy-worthy coups. But your eye (or your kids eye) probably skips right over those Instagram posts and focuses on the commits to Harvard and Amherst. There is also the risk of committing to a school at 17 that you won’t attend for over a YEAR. Kids change. Interests change. Grades change. I hope it is the right thing for my kid, and I hope you can just see it as a slightly different path, not something better or worse. Your time is right around the corner. |
+1 This. I’ve already prepared my kid for it. |
| If it will help you to just enjoy your own kid then yes, go off of social media for a while. The reality is that a) some kids are smarter/better in sports/etc, etc and b) some kids are luckier and c) some kids come from families with more resources. My kids are in college now and I had to realize all of the above. This is life. |
| D3 athletic commitment posts are flat out weird. The lax kids are are the worst from what my kid tells me, ridiculously self absorbed - I mean who cares if Finn, Braden or Shackelford “committed” to be full pay at a $95k/year Nescac or Swarthmore. I’ve heard that some private high schools even have “signing days” for these kids - total joke |
Do you find it weird when someone posts on Instagram about their vacation to Ocean City because you should only brag about going to the Vinyard? Do you sneer when someone is excited they got a new job as a teacher because it isn’t as impressive as getting a job in finance? People are proud of themselves when they do stuff that makes them happy. It isn’t any deeper than that. |
The vast majority of athletes in top D3 SlACs are white. Not. Even. Close. |
I kinda went quiet for a year too. Skipped holiday parties and snuck in and out of events. I loved chatting with the kids who were actually applying; their parents were insufferable. |
Please do whatever you need to do to avoid this. |