Anonymous wrote:I have a question OP: why in the world do you think any of us cares?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Spin off that other thread.
I was one of only 100 kids to get it (2 from each state). I was picked by the local bottlers association.
I met who became and still is my best friend from MIT (I convinced her to come with me).
My parents weren't involved in any of it, but I did have a college coach. I started an organization at our school, was the VP of another, did crazy amounts of community service with the Red Cross and other organizations. I won multiple national business competitions and awards.
I won many scholarships and it resulted in my financial aid being taken away. So I did all that work for nothing. It was the first of many life lessons in failure at MIT.
The other thread was about the high school Coca Cola scholars program, which is 150 kids total and not limited by state. You seem to have participated in a college version which is less selective (the high school one generally has ~100,000 applicants for the 150 winners)
Anonymous wrote:Spin off that other thread.
I was one of only 100 kids to get it (2 from each state). I was picked by the local bottlers association.
I met who became and still is my best friend from MIT (I convinced her to come with me).
My parents weren't involved in any of it, but I did have a college coach. I started an organization at our school, was the VP of another, did crazy amounts of community service with the Red Cross and other organizations. I won multiple national business competitions and awards.
I won many scholarships and it resulted in my financial aid being taken away. So I did all that work for nothing. It was the first of many life lessons in failure at MIT.
Anonymous wrote:I have a question OP: why in the world do you think any of us cares?
Anonymous wrote:How often do you drink Coca-Cola?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was wondering the same.
I'm glad OP posted. Folks push their kids hard. Here's someone who did all the things.
You say the community service and awards were all for nothing because you lost the financial aid. What was driving you to accomplish so much? Sounds like external motivators. And if yes, what do you wish you had done instead with all that dedication?
Anonymous wrote:Sorry OP. People on here just like to be mean!
Other than meeting your best friend, would you apply for all those a scholarships again? Would you have received financial aid otherwise?
Anonymous wrote:I was wondering the same.