Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I call major troll. Anyone who really attended Princeton would know that this is an incorrect use of the word "myself."
Your faith in the Ivy League is touching.
LOL. I guess you're right. Poor little me - a grad of State U - had a fantastic high school English grammar teacher who had the sense to teach us how to use the word "myself."
OP, since you weren't so fortunate, here's a little primer:
Your sentence, "On my side, my father, grandfather and myself attended" is incorrect; it should read "On my side, my father, grandfather and I attended."
To check "yourself" in the future, drop the other subjects in the sentence. You would then have "Myself attended." That does not make sense, either in written or oral form. "I attended," however, does read correctly.

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It sounds, op, like both your son and you know - or at least strongly believe - that he will otherwise get into Harvard, Stanford, or Yale
OP just said the opposite.
Read between the lines. Actually, let me break it down for you.
If op's son is admitted to Harvard, Stanford, and/or Yale, then he would prefer to attend one of those universities over Princeton as a legacy.
However, if op's son is not admitted to Harvard, Stanford, and/or Yale, then he would prefer to attend Princeton as a legacy than any lesser university.
Clearly op and her son do believe that he will be admitted to Harvard, Stanford, and/or Yale, otherwise they would not gamble with a particularly historied legacy of admission to Princeton.
I am the OP.
He is qualified for HYS, but he doesn't have the legacy advantage that he has at Princeton. So at HYS he would be facing more or less the same long odds that all other high-stats, non-prodigy, prep-school kids face.
As of now he wants to apply to Yale early, Harvard and Stanford RD. He is also thinking of doing Penn, Columbia, Dartmouth RD and the rest will be safeties and matches. I imagine that if he did not get into HYS, he eventually would want to go for Princeton as opposed to a non-HYP ivy. At least I hope. Not attending Princeton is bad enough in our family, attending a lower ivy would drive the in-laws and DH completely insane. Plus the teasing from cousins, uncles etc will be insufferable. I know this sounds ridiculous to most people but this is my family. My side of the family are quite more relaxed about these things. DH's side of the family is a whole different story.
Anonymous wrote:Imagine if he goes elsewhere and marries a woman whose entire family didn’t go to Princeton! OP will never be able to show her face in public again!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It sounds, op, like both your son and you know - or at least strongly believe - that he will otherwise get into Harvard, Stanford, or Yale
OP just said the opposite.
Read between the lines. Actually, let me break it down for you.
If op's son is admitted to Harvard, Stanford, and/or Yale, then he would prefer to attend one of those universities over Princeton as a legacy.
However, if op's son is not admitted to Harvard, Stanford, and/or Yale, then he would prefer to attend Princeton as a legacy than any lesser university.
Clearly op and her son do believe that he will be admitted to Harvard, Stanford, and/or Yale, otherwise they would not gamble with a particularly historied legacy of admission to Princeton.
I am the OP.
He is qualified for HYS, but he doesn't have the legacy advantage that he has at Princeton. So at HYS he would be facing more or less the same long odds that all other high-stats, non-prodigy, prep-school kids face.
As of now he wants to apply to Yale early, Harvard and Stanford RD. He is also thinking of doing Penn, Columbia, Dartmouth RD and the rest will be safeties and matches. I imagine that if he did not get into HYS, he eventually would want to go for Princeton as opposed to a non-HYP ivy. At least I hope. Not attending Princeton is bad enough in our family, attending a lower ivy would drive the in-laws and DH completely insane. Plus the teasing from cousins, uncles etc will be insufferable. I know this sounds ridiculous to most people but this is my family. My side of the family are quite more relaxed about these things. DH's side of the family is a whole different story.
Anonymous wrote:I am familiar with families like yours so I get your issue. DS went to Andover. He had a friend there who went on to be a 9th generation Yale student and was also a 9th generation Andover student. For that family the path was clear and utterly rigid. First Andover, then Yale. No deviation was even entertained as a thought, let alone tolerated.
Imho it puts unnecessary pressure on the children. They should be free to make their own path and not be constrained by family tradition.
Anonymous wrote:This poor child.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I call major troll. Anyone who really attended Princeton would know that this is an incorrect use of the word "myself."
Your faith in the Ivy League is touching.
LOL. I guess you're right. Poor little me - a grad of State U - had a fantastic high school English grammar teacher who had the sense to teach us how to use the word "myself."
OP, since you weren't so fortunate, here's a little primer:
Your sentence, "On my side, my father, grandfather and myself attended" is incorrect; it should read "On my side, my father, grandfather and I attended."
To check "yourself" in the future, drop the other subjects in the sentence. You would then have "Myself attended." That does not make sense, either in written or oral form. "I attended," however, does read correctly.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I call major troll. Anyone who really attended Princeton would know that this is an incorrect use of the word "myself."
Your faith in the Ivy League is touching.
LOL. I guess you're right. Poor little me - a grad of State U - had a fantastic high school English grammar teacher who had the sense to teach us how to use the word "myself."
OP, since you weren't so fortunate, here's a little primer:
Your sentence, "On my side, my father, grandfather and myself attended" is incorrect; it should read "On my side, my father, grandfather and I attended."
To check "yourself" in the future, drop the other subjects in the sentence. You would then have "Myself attended." That does not make sense, either in written or oral form. "I attended," however, does read correctly.
Anonymous wrote:If your kid is too dumb to know how privileged he is to have the opportunity to go to Princeton and is turning his nose up about it, he belongs at UMD or CNU instead
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I call major troll. Anyone who really attended Princeton would know that this is an incorrect use of the word "myself."
Your faith in the Ivy League is touching.