Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And yet here you all are. One way to not be “exhausted” is to not exhaust yourselves thinking about this stuff?
what about you?
I don’t find it exhausting. I like to educate myself and get the lay of the land but I don’t find it psychologically taxing in any way. I filter out anything I think is stupid or irrelevant and am generally comfortable in my own skin. But if it stressed me out to read this stuff I’d stop.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And yet here you all are. One way to not be “exhausted” is to not exhaust yourselves thinking about this stuff?
what about you?
I don’t find it exhausting. I like to educate myself and get the lay of the land but I don’t find it psychologically taxing in any way. I filter out anything I think is stupid or irrelevant and am generally comfortable in my own skin. But if it stressed me out to read this stuff I’d stop.
Anonymous wrote:It’s a sorting mechanism and a social marker that, like it or not, will be a core part of your brand for the rest of your life.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It can be exhausting.
Agreed?
A certain subset of UMC America thinks it matters where you go to college, both career-wise and in finding the "right" spouse.
This is what drives 90% of college obsession.
lol. Where you go to college can matter. The right spouse also matters wherever that person comes from. The idea that it does not matter at all is kind of silly. If you go to an awful college of course you still have the chance to do whatever you want. You have less ways to do it though. You also have more road blocks and roundabouts. Less so from a top school. Of course you can still screw it up but more paths; less roadblocks. UMC parents think this because they see it every day
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It can be exhausting.
Agreed?
A certain subset of UMC America thinks it matters where you go to college, both career-wise and in finding the "right" spouse.
This is what drives 90% of college obsession.
lol. Where you go to college can matter. The right spouse also matters wherever that person comes from. The idea that it does not matter at all is kind of silly. If you go to an awful college of course you still have the chance to do whatever you want. You have less ways to do it though. You also have more road blocks and roundabouts. Less so from a top school. Of course you can still screw it up but more paths; less roadblocks. UMC parents think this because they see it every day
Right - but it’s not the end-all-be-all that a lot of folks here make it out to be. Unless you are going to a top-50 or bottom 1/3 school, I’d doesn’t really matter all that much - or matter as much as the time, effort, expense, etc. I equate it to the travel sports frenzy that starts at age 10.
There's a difference between Top 10 school and a Top 50
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It can be exhausting.
Agreed?
A certain subset of UMC America thinks it matters where you go to college, both career-wise and in finding the "right" spouse.
This is what drives 90% of college obsession.
lol. Where you go to college can matter. The right spouse also matters wherever that person comes from. The idea that it does not matter at all is kind of silly. If you go to an awful college of course you still have the chance to do whatever you want. You have less ways to do it though. You also have more road blocks and roundabouts. Less so from a top school. Of course you can still screw it up but more paths; less roadblocks. UMC parents think this because they see it every day
Right - but it’s not the end-all-be-all that a lot of folks here make it out to be. Unless you are going to a top-50 or bottom 1/3 school, I’d doesn’t really matter all that much - or matter as much as the time, effort, expense, etc. I equate it to the travel sports frenzy that starts at age 10.
There's a difference between Top 10 school and a Top 50
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And yet here you all are. One way to not be “exhausted” is to not exhaust yourselves thinking about this stuff?
what about you?
Anonymous wrote:And yet here you all are. One way to not be “exhausted” is to not exhaust yourselves thinking about this stuff?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It can be exhausting.
Agreed?
Yes. New to this site and the UC mentality and stress of getting into top 20/25 whatever colleges...it's been very eye opening. Three degress between spouse and I and all our parents said was "You're getting a college degree". And we did. And we've been successful and are financially well off. We used the same tactic with our DC and he's now in a state school that would be frowned up here but we're proud of him. Get a degree and then work hard. So glad and grateful we were not raised with that stress.
Anonymous wrote:It can be exhausting.
Agreed?