Anonymous wrote:
They sound really stupid and so do you, for being proud of them.
1. College decisions should have nothing to do with who you're dating and where they're going.
2. It's only application time. They're not sure they're even getting in, but I'm 100% sure they won't go to the ones they didn't apply to! Talk of closing doors.
Unbelievable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
They sound really stupid and so do you, for being proud of them.
1. College decisions should have nothing to do with who you're dating and where they're going.
2. It's only application time. They're not sure they're even getting in, but I'm 100% sure they won't go to the ones they didn't apply to! Talk of closing doors.
Unbelievable.
+1. OP you are putting the cart way ahead of the horse here. And as much as you like to think they are being super mature by not making their college decisions based on each other...actually that's exactly what they ARE doing. He is closing off all these doors for himself by deciding to not even APPLYING to an entire (substantial!) geographic of schools...that shows a serious lack in judgment and just plain common sense. If anything it sounds like a weird dramatic teenage romcom drama-esque way of thinking. I certainly would not be supportive of this, much less proud...
I actually WANT him to stay in California. It is much, much less expensive and he has always talked about going to Stanford or Pomona.
How are Stanford or Pomona less expensive? Those are private colleges with tuition at the same level as other expensive private schools.
Encourage both of them to apply to the schools they are most interested in. Unlikely they will still be dating by year end anyway so not worth planning around. And even if they are still dating it's unlikely they will end up st the same school.
Not OP but no airfare. Or very short inexpensive flights. I am the PP above with the kids in California and Chicago and it is very expensive. Plus shipping stuff out to them rather than just driving it out.
I've got a kid in college in the midwest and frankly the cost of flights is nothing compared to $70k in tuition. I fly all over the country for work and can fly to CA for less than I can fly to NYC. Oddly distance has little to do with fares.
Between driving and flying? Yeah, it makes a big difference in cost.
Anonymous wrote:....they told DH and I together that this was the only way they could see being together later in life - if they broke up for college.
Can someone explain this logic to me? I don't understand why breaking up for college would lead to them being together later in life. You can break up any time, any place.
Anonymous wrote:....they told DH and I together that this was the only way they could see being together later in life - if they broke up for college.
Can someone explain this logic to me? I don't understand why breaking up for college would lead to them being together later in life. You can break up any time, any place.
....they told DH and I together that this was the only way they could see being together later in life - if they broke up for college.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
They sound really stupid and so do you, for being proud of them.
1. College decisions should have nothing to do with who you're dating and where they're going.
2. It's only application time. They're not sure they're even getting in, but I'm 100% sure they won't go to the ones they didn't apply to! Talk of closing doors.
Unbelievable.
+1
Why are they limiting themselves? Stupid kids.
I don't know but doesn't every kid limit him or herself in choosing three or five colleges to apply to? I was from Chicago and my parents insisted that I stay in the midwest to go to school for economic reasons. What's the difference?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
They sound really stupid and so do you, for being proud of them.
1. College decisions should have nothing to do with who you're dating and where they're going.
2. It's only application time. They're not sure they're even getting in, but I'm 100% sure they won't go to the ones they didn't apply to! Talk of closing doors.
Unbelievable.
+1
Why are they limiting themselves? Stupid kids.
Anonymous wrote:
They sound really stupid and so do you, for being proud of them.
1. College decisions should have nothing to do with who you're dating and where they're going.
2. It's only application time. They're not sure they're even getting in, but I'm 100% sure they won't go to the ones they didn't apply to! Talk of closing doors.
Unbelievable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
They sound really stupid and so do you, for being proud of them.
1. College decisions should have nothing to do with who you're dating and where they're going.
2. It's only application time. They're not sure they're even getting in, but I'm 100% sure they won't go to the ones they didn't apply to! Talk of closing doors.
Unbelievable.
+1. OP you are putting the cart way ahead of the horse here. And as much as you like to think they are being super mature by not making their college decisions based on each other...actually that's exactly what they ARE doing. He is closing off all these doors for himself by deciding to not even APPLYING to an entire (substantial!) geographic of schools...that shows a serious lack in judgment and just plain common sense. If anything it sounds like a weird dramatic teenage romcom drama-esque way of thinking. I certainly would not be supportive of this, much less proud...
I actually WANT him to stay in California. It is much, much less expensive and he has always talked about going to Stanford or Pomona.
How are Stanford or Pomona less expensive? Those are private colleges with tuition at the same level as other expensive private schools.
Encourage both of them to apply to the schools they are most interested in. Unlikely they will still be dating by year end anyway so not worth planning around. And even if they are still dating it's unlikely they will end up st the same school.
Not OP but no airfare. Or very short inexpensive flights. I am the PP above with the kids in California and Chicago and it is very expensive. Plus shipping stuff out to them rather than just driving it out.
I've got a kid in college in the midwest and frankly the cost of flights is nothing compared to $70k in tuition. I fly all over the country for work and can fly to CA for less than I can fly to NYC. Oddly distance has little to do with fares.
Anonymous wrote:First, although I am shocked, I am very proud of their maturity in making this decision. We are in California and I knew that girlfriend was going to go to a school back east and assumed my son would as well. It is just September but they told DH and I together that this was the only way they could see being together later in life - if they broke up for college.
Second, I am thrilled that DS is staying on the west coast but worried he might regret not applying to an Ivy just because the girlfriend "called" the east coast.
Third, is all this maturity too good to be true? They are both 17 and really smart, good kids - they have been together for over a year and are very close. She practically lives at our house and my son spent the summer working for her father.
But all in all, I should be happy, right? DS will apply to schools in California and date other girls once he gets to college. Could it really be this easy and smooth?
Anyone else have a kid who decided that he and the girlfriend/boyfreind would break up in a year?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
They sound really stupid and so do you, for being proud of them.
1. College decisions should have nothing to do with who you're dating and where they're going.
2. It's only application time. They're not sure they're even getting in, but I'm 100% sure they won't go to the ones they didn't apply to! Talk of closing doors.
Unbelievable.
+1. OP you are putting the cart way ahead of the horse here. And as much as you like to think they are being super mature by not making their college decisions based on each other...actually that's exactly what they ARE doing. He is closing off all these doors for himself by deciding to not even APPLYING to an entire (substantial!) geographic of schools...that shows a serious lack in judgment and just plain common sense. If anything it sounds like a weird dramatic teenage romcom drama-esque way of thinking. I certainly would not be supportive of this, much less proud...
I actually WANT him to stay in California. It is much, much less expensive and he has always talked about going to Stanford or Pomona.
How are Stanford or Pomona less expensive? Those are private colleges with tuition at the same level as other expensive private schools.
Encourage both of them to apply to the schools they are most interested in. Unlikely they will still be dating by year end anyway so not worth planning around. And even if they are still dating it's unlikely they will end up st the same school.
Not OP but no airfare. Or very short inexpensive flights. I am the PP above with the kids in California and Chicago and it is very expensive. Plus shipping stuff out to them rather than just driving it out.