Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This one is going to be total fodder for this crowd but ... not even applying to Harvard or any Ivy when I was graduating high school. I would have gotten in (high stats, from a rural area in the South, plus it was the 90s) but refused to even try because I thought it was too elitist. I don't think my career was ultimately harmed, but I didn't have a great college experience and find myself wishing i got to have that sort of college experience.
Same. I was valedictorian at a high school in the South, in the 80s, with 99%ile SAT score. Neither my parents nor the guidance counselor had a clue (University of Georgia was kind of the pinnacle where I was from) and I went to a school that sent me a brochure in the mail and offered me a scholarship (and got me far, far from Georgia, which I don't regret). My life turned out well, but living in a place where so many people make assumptions about you based on where you went to school can be hard. I try not to have a chip on my shoulder about it.
Anonymous wrote:Not marrying the hot guy with the huge package.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I did not marry the man I loved with all my heart and soul, because timing.
Decades on, I see timing was just an excuse for fear, and cost me the chance to live life with my soulmate.
Is he married now?
He may be separated. Neither of us have social media, but he’s accepted a professorship distant from his home and I hear his wife hasn’t moved. She has a serious career, so they may be doing LD. I have been separated for years. I feel like he would find me if he were meaningfully single.
To the snickers lady: Ahahaha, you are my hero
I found this one of the hardest regrets to read. I think we need a spinoff thread where everyone convinces you to reach out.
What if he is not separated, though? Or only kind of testing the waters. That would be so awful. He is one that would never, ever cheat, nor would I. I look for him in airports 😬
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow, there’s a lot of law school regret. But is it regret over attending law school, or not attending?
I listed law school and my regret was going to law school and becoming a lawyer.
Anonymous wrote:Wow, there’s a lot of law school regret. But is it regret over attending law school, or not attending?
Anonymous wrote:Dropping out of high school my Senior year.
Background:
My home life was hell & my parents never loved me.
I grew up very depressed + suffered severe anxiety because of it.
This affected my studies tremendously - I HATED school, I struggled w/both my studies as well as fitting in.
I was teased horribly amongst my peers and just gave up on caring about ANYthing at all.
Quitting school affected the trajectory of my entire life I feel.
I did eventually complete my credits via a high school correspondence course, then went on to earn an Associate of Science degree from a local community college.
I wanted to transfer to a University but could not pass the math courses necessary to properly transfer out. 😕
I currently work in childcare where the $$ is very low.
I regret not doing well in high school, possibly earning a scholarship then graduating from a four-yr university
If I had, then I could have a decent-paying job by now and could have had better life options.
Anonymous wrote:This one is going to be total fodder for this crowd but ... not even applying to Harvard or any Ivy when I was graduating high school. I would have gotten in (high stats, from a rural area in the South, plus it was the 90s) but refused to even try because I thought it was too elitist. I don't think my career was ultimately harmed, but I didn't have a great college experience and find myself wishing i got to have that sort of college experience.