Anonymous wrote:Is it still popular to do stickers on cars? I moved away from DC to a different part of the country where no one does that, but I liked the car stickers.
…not just college ones.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I like following DC's school Instagram announcement page because I like to see where kids land, but I do not want constant updates from friends about their kids' application statuses, and I definitely do not want to know about scholarships, etc. Last year, we got actual printed college announcements with professional photos of the kids--essentially SM on crack. A big no thanks on the printed announcements aka brag bomb.
Again, it's the company you have chosen to keep. Let me guess: private school?
The printed announcements (coming from 3 separate families) were all from public school families.
No, they weren't. And there weren't 3. And I was right that your kids are in private school.
I'm very sorry that my experience does not fit the narrative you are trying to sell. The three families from whom we received printed college/graduation announcements were in fact from public school parents. Two attend BCC, the other one is at WW. I was not trying to make it into a private vs public school thing.
But your kids attend private school, right? Yes or no. It's a basic question.
They do not. Again, sorry.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I love seeing them. This is so weird. I have two in college about to graduate and I still love seeing where kids land.
Why? Why do you care? Why do you think it matters at all? Especially if it's not your kid? I'm genuinely curious.
This is pretty sad. How can the idea of pleasure over your friends achievements be such a foreign concept?
DP.
Here’s the thing. Pleasure is great but you’re being dishonest if you don’t admit that there’s a huge element of narcissistic bragging at play for many parents, and I think that’s what irks some of us. As example, my friends son struggled in high school and when he got into college, I was overjoyed for him. Same with another friend’s dc who worked his butt off in high school, juggling academics and sports, and was recruited at a D1. Same for a friends son who got into Yale who she worried about socially as a kid. These are otherwise humble families. But in contrast, I know some people who have really taken to SM to brag about vacations, other ‘cool’ things they’re doing, their parties, their husbands love letter to them, their new pricey car, etc and yes, those people irk me. I stopped following them on SM ages ago, but those are the same ones who make announcements in other ways to ensure no one missed their latest brag.
Ok, for real, you are exactly the type of poster I am curious to get an answer from. I'm trying not to judge but I honestly can't understand why so many people have this view, and yet are on social media. Most of social media seems to be about sharing the (mostly good) things in your life. If posts about vacations, parties, new cars, college acceptances etc. all bother you as "narcissistic bragging," then what exactly do you like to see on your social media feed from your friends and acquaintances? Is it only acceptable to share about your struggles, and if you have enough struggles, then it is okay to share good news now and then?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's jealousy. I feel it, too. But here's the thing. If someone posts a proud announcement about their kid going to some 80%+ acceptance rate school, I don't feel scornful. It's only the ones posting about the elite schools that make me annoyed. So I recognize that about myself. I grit my teeth and comment "Wow wow wow! How proud are you! Congratulations to the whole family!" And then I silence further notifications about the post.
Yikes. Really? My kid got in unhooked to an Ivy. He didn’t post on the school Instagram and I didn’t post on mine (very small set of followers anyways).
It’s disheartening that people take it that way. He did put a sticker on the car. It’s kind of crazy it’s ok for anyone in a school below T20 to do- but other kids are t supposed to show any school pride.
Stickers on the car is so pretentious.
Really? My ODU sticker is pretentious?
It’s only pretentious to you when it’s a school ranked higher than the one your child was accepted to. Let’s be real.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's jealousy[b]. I feel it, too. But here's the thing. If someone posts a proud announcement about their kid going to some 80%+ acceptance rate school, I don't feel scornful. It's only the ones posting about the elite schools that make me annoyed. So I recognize that about myself. I grit my teeth and comment "Wow wow wow! How proud are you! Congratulations to the whole family!" And then I silence further notifications about the post.
DP. It may be for you but for many it is not that.
Anonymous wrote:It's jealousy[b]. I feel it, too. But here's the thing. If someone posts a proud announcement about their kid going to some 80%+ acceptance rate school, I don't feel scornful. It's only the ones posting about the elite schools that make me annoyed. So I recognize that about myself. I grit my teeth and comment "Wow wow wow! How proud are you! Congratulations to the whole family!" And then I silence further notifications about the post.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's jealousy. I feel it, too. But here's the thing. If someone posts a proud announcement about their kid going to some 80%+ acceptance rate school, I don't feel scornful. It's only the ones posting about the elite schools that make me annoyed. So I recognize that about myself. I grit my teeth and comment "Wow wow wow! How proud are you! Congratulations to the whole family!" And then I silence further notifications about the post.
Yikes. Really? My kid got in unhooked to an Ivy. He didn’t post on the school Instagram and I didn’t post on mine (very small set of followers anyways).
It’s disheartening that people take it that way. He did put a sticker on the car. It’s kind of crazy it’s ok for anyone in a school below T20 to do- but other kids are t supposed to show any school pride.
Stickers on the car is so pretentious.
Anonymous wrote:Nothing amuses me more than some parents’ ineluctable enthusiasm while revealing their kids’ admission to Northeastern or Tulane.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I like following DC's school Instagram announcement page because I like to see where kids land, but I do not want constant updates from friends about their kids' application statuses, and I definitely do not want to know about scholarships, etc. Last year, we got actual printed college announcements with professional photos of the kids--essentially SM on crack. A big no thanks on the printed announcements aka brag bomb.
Again, it's the company you have chosen to keep. Let me guess: private school?
The printed announcements (coming from 3 separate families) were all from public school families.
No, they weren't. And there weren't 3. And I was right that your kids are in private school.
I'm very sorry that my experience does not fit the narrative you are trying to sell. The three families from whom we received printed college/graduation announcements were in fact from public school parents. Two attend BCC, the other one is at WW. I was not trying to make it into a private vs public school thing.
But your kids attend private school, right? Yes or no. It's a basic question.
Anonymous wrote:I love seeing them. This is so weird. I have two in college about to graduate and I still love seeing where kids land.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I like following DC's school Instagram announcement page because I like to see where kids land, but I do not want constant updates from friends about their kids' application statuses, and I definitely do not want to know about scholarships, etc. Last year, we got actual printed college announcements with professional photos of the kids--essentially SM on crack. A big no thanks on the printed announcements aka brag bomb.
Again, it's the company you have chosen to keep. Let me guess: private school?
The printed announcements (coming from 3 separate families) were all from public school families.
No, they weren't. And there weren't 3. And I was right that your kids are in private school.
I'm very sorry that my experience does not fit the narrative you are trying to sell. The three families from whom we received printed college/graduation announcements were in fact from public school parents. Two attend BCC, the other one is at WW. I was not trying to make it into a private vs public school thing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I love seeing them. This is so weird. I have two in college about to graduate and I still love seeing where kids land.
Why? Why do you care? Why do you think it matters at all? Especially if it's not your kid? I'm genuinely curious.
This is pretty sad. How can the idea of pleasure over your friends achievements be such a foreign concept?
DP.
Here’s the thing. Pleasure is great but you’re being dishonest if you don’t admit that there’s a huge element of narcissistic bragging at play for many parents, and I think that’s what irks some of us. As example, my friends son struggled in high school and when he got into college, I was overjoyed for him. Same with another friend’s dc who worked his butt off in high school, juggling academics and sports, and was recruited at a D1. Same for a friends son who got into Yale who she worried about socially as a kid. These are otherwise humble families. But in contrast, I know some people who have really taken to SM to brag about vacations, other ‘cool’ things they’re doing, their parties, their husbands love letter to them, their new pricey car, etc and yes, those people irk me. I stopped following them on SM ages ago, but those are the same ones who make announcements in other ways to ensure no one missed their latest brag.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a kid in the mix this year too, and I know we all care as parents but I don’t need blow by blow updates/brags.
Post it on social media if you must, tell grandma, but you don’t need to text every friend with a ‘big announcement’ that Larla is going to X school.
Flame away
Have kids already started deciding outside of the ED process? Are you referring to "applied ED and got in" folks?
Are you are pre-emptively describing what will be occurring in Feb/March/April?