NP. Love this post.Anonymous wrote:Perhaps your family and student are more feeling another stage of the college application and admittance process? There is often a high about getting an acceptance and then about committing to a school. The buying family members the t-shirts and the this-crazy-process is over type of thing. Every senior goes through something similar at one point or another. It is all about the excitement and promises of what is ahead. And then ... it really hits some: what is exactly ahead? That is another stage completely.
At some point most rising college freshman switch from "I can't wait!" to "what the heck have I done" as in they wonder what it will be like? will they make friends? what if their classes are too hard? what if I miss home or my high school friends (or both)? Even if they don't admit these feelings those feelings are lurking.
I sometimes think that those who get in ED enter this stage sooner than the rest as they are simply on an accelerated path through the entire process. It can easily manifest as buyer's remorse.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
My DD chose a top 25 SLAC to ED to and was admitted. She has had kids at her school saying "congratulations, but it is a safety for me."
Wow! I can't believe kids would say things like that to each other! Incredibly rude! However, clearly your daughter made the right choice.
Anonymous wrote:Perhaps your family and student are more feeling another stage of the college application and admittance process? There is often a high about getting an acceptance and then about committing to a school. The buying family members the t-shirts and the this-crazy-process is over type of thing. Every senior goes through something similar at one point or another. It is all about the excitement and promises of what is ahead. And then ... it really hits some: what is exactly ahead? That is another stage completely.
At some point most rising college freshman switch from "I can't wait!" to "what the heck have I done" as in they wonder what it will be like? will they make friends? what if their classes are too hard? what if I miss home or my high school friends (or both)? Even if they don't admit these feelings those feelings are lurking.
I sometimes think that those who get in ED enter this stage sooner than the rest as they are simply on an accelerated path through the entire process. It can easily manifest as buyer's remorse.