Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Give it a few months. No one will care where kids go. It’s a moment where everyone wants to show off. Your kid will be fine and so will you.
This is such a negative response. College is where you will spend the next four years, where you make lifelong friendships, where you may meet your spouse. It is not just to show off.
I often have this feeling that people are not happy for me. I don’t want to say they are jealous but they don’t seem happy for my wins.
Who in the world meets their spouse in college? You’re 18-22 years old. Barely out of the teen years!
It’s the smart move for a hot girl to lock down a high-earning man now before he realizes what a catch he’ll be. Go for the genius nerd who will be stunned someone like this is even looking at him. Get the breast enhancement surgery during your 20s on his dime before you have kids. Then when he gets to his early 30s and realizes what a catch he’s become, you’re ten years in and will secure generous child support and alimony. Then she can lock down the lifetime partner the way Lauren Sanchez did.
Anonymous wrote:Yep, being a bad mom, sore loser. In our circle all the kids did exceptional but mine, of course we have ADD going for us. I don't show it to my son but it's eating me up alive.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Give it a few months. No one will care where kids go. It’s a moment where everyone wants to show off. Your kid will be fine and so will you.
This is such a negative response. College is where you will spend the next four years, where you make lifelong friendships, where you may meet your spouse. It is not just to show off.
I often have this feeling that people are not happy for me. I don’t want to say they are jealous but they don’t seem happy for my wins.
Who in the world meets their spouse in college? You’re 18-22 years old. Barely out of the teen years!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Give it a few months. No one will care where kids go. It’s a moment where everyone wants to show off. Your kid will be fine and so will you.
This is such a negative response. College is where you will spend the next four years, where you make lifelong friendships, where you may meet your spouse. It is not just to show off.
I often have this feeling that people are not happy for me. I don’t want to say they are jealous but they don’t seem happy for my wins.
Anonymous wrote:Yep, being a bad mom, sore loser. In our circle all the kids did exceptional but mine, of course we have ADD going for us. I don't show it to my son but it's eating me up alive.
Anonymous wrote:You may not tell your kid, but believe me he probably knows. Focus on where he is happy to be going and encourage him to make the most of his time there.
This ridiculous notion that you are defined by where you go to college is quite frankly toxic and stupid and being ashamed of your own kid based on thing is even worse. You are his parent, start acting like it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP you will soon get used to your lower status in your friend group but you have to be honest with yourself - if your kid got into an inferior college because he was a low-achiever in high school, this was the result of bad parenting and quite properly reflects poorly on you.
NP- I know you're just being mean and I should ignore, but you've captured how I feel. My DS is probably going to his safety and I feel like I messed up somehow and let him down. Trouble is, he has a great (not perfect) GPA, took all the right courses and did all the right ECs. Still, the admissions process won. He doesn't love his targets anymore and didn't get into his ED reach. So either he gets excited about a target (which I'm not excited about either) or he goes to the safety he always loved (but is the lowest ranked school of all his high-achieving friends, by far).
I could have written OP's post. This whole process is not for the weak if you have a top 25% of their class kid.
Anonymous wrote:OP you will soon get used to your lower status in your friend group but you have to be honest with yourself - if your kid got into an inferior college because he was a low-achiever in high school, this was the result of bad parenting and quite properly reflects poorly on you.
Anonymous wrote:The best way to get over this is to get yourself a life, sweetie pie. Find a hobby!! You'll need one when buddy boy goes to college anyway.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP you will soon get used to your lower status in your friend group but you have to be honest with yourself - if your kid got into an inferior college because he was a low-achiever in high school, this was the result of bad parenting and quite properly reflects poorly on you.
Very harsh and unfair to OP. A lot of things can happen to kids in high school that are beyond the parents’ control. The parents can provide all the nurturing, encouragement and resources in the world, but it’s ultimately on the kid. We need to stop treating a college admit as some kind of prize for good parenting.
Anonymous wrote:Yep, being a bad mom, sore loser. In our circle all the kids did exceptional but mine, of course we have ADD going for us. I don't show it to my son but it's eating me up alive.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know a ton of people that went to Towson, Salisbury, JMU, ODU etc who are super successful, so I wasn’t delusional enough to believe that this really mattered.
This. I was bummed DS needed to go instate (which limited choices) due to finances, but also realize that in the vast majority of cases it didn't matter. My co-worker who went to Ivy grad and undergrad and I have the same job with same salaries (I went to mid level state colleges.) ALSO I knew my kid with ADHD wouldn't have been successful at a top tier school....
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Give it a few months. No one will care where kids go. It’s a moment where everyone wants to show off. Your kid will be fine and so will you.
This is such a negative response. College is where you will spend the next four years, where you make lifelong friendships, where you may meet your spouse. It is not just to show off.
I often have this feeling that people are not happy for me. I don’t want to say they are jealous but they don’t seem happy for my wins.