Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why is it harder at Indiana? I heard similar.
Too few spots for number of girls rushing.
Correction:
Too few spots in the specific house that silly 18-year-olds determine are the “cool” houses.
The literally set quota on the last night based on the number of girls still enrolled in recruitment divided by the number of chapters. But if every girl goes into recruitment thinking they’ll die if they aren’t a Kappa, then yes, some will be disappointed and will drop out.
It’s like claiming you didn’t go to college because there aren’t enough spots in the college freshmen classes. Ummmmm no. You didn’t go to Harvard or Stanford or Yale maybe….and possibly the state flagship didn’t have a spot for you either so you decided not to go to college. But you could have gone to a regional university or community college. You just didn’t want to.
The fact is that there are not too few spots for number of girls rushing. There are just too few spots for everyone rushing to be able to join the one or two houses they all wanted.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All the women I know who grew up in the south think sorority life was the peak and defining time of their life and still mention their house when they meet new people, still wear their house colors, still identify as XYZ whenever they can.
All the women I know who grew up outside the south said they had fun for a year or two but then it was pretty cringy.
Fake news.
You’ve obviously not lived in Arkansas, Alabama, Georgia, Nevada, Virginia, New York, Illinois, and Pennsylvania. You should get out more. Cultures are different.
NP here. I am from Virginia and went to school in North Carolina. I don't know what women who grew up in the south but either your lying or know hardly anyone. Gossiping stereotypes is gross. Do better.
You understand that the south is not a monolith and gatekeeping the south vs Deep South vs Bible Belt, etc doesn't make some regions not the south. Culturally. Are you also part of the Tik Tok trend that NC isn't the south? That TN isn't the south? You clam to grow up in the deep south, ok. Good of you. I am sorry someone hurt you somewhere at sometime.
Virginia is not the south - culturally. Being a college kid in a college town is not the same experience as living as an adult in the south. You didn’t live in the deep south as an adult, you have zero reason to tell me that my experiences didn’t happen. Bizarre.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I did not get a bid
The one poster on this thread who's actually honest about why they didn't join Greek life. Respect.
My advice: Get to know as many girls as you can across many different sororities and then rush as a sophomore. Also, and this is key, make friends with or date fraternity guys. This will vastly raise your status ahead of rush.
Finally, I'm not sure if you set your sights exclusively on the top houses the first go-round, but don't close your mind to accepting a middle-tier bid when you try again. Not only will your status on campus be vastly higher than if you remain a GDI, but the networking opportunities will be just as good as the top tier, as your middle-tier house may well be top tier at the other schools that feed the city you land in after graduation.
Good luck!
Anonymous wrote:I did not get a bid
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All the women I know who grew up in the south think sorority life was the peak and defining time of their life and still mention their house when they meet new people, still wear their house colors, still identify as XYZ whenever they can.
All the women I know who grew up outside the south said they had fun for a year or two but then it was pretty cringy.
Fake news.
You’ve obviously not lived in Arkansas, Alabama, Georgia, Nevada, Virginia, New York, Illinois, and Pennsylvania. You should get out more. Cultures are different.
NP here. I am from Virginia and went to school in North Carolina. I don't know what women who grew up in the south but either your lying or know hardly anyone. Gossiping stereotypes is gross. Do better.
We just almost elected as president a woman who fits the "constantly mentions her sorority 30+ years later" stereotype pretty much to a t, and you're going to slander PP for saying it's a real thing based on your narrow experience at Chapel Hill?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All the women I know who grew up in the south think sorority life was the peak and defining time of their life and still mention their house when they meet new people, still wear their house colors, still identify as XYZ whenever they can.
All the women I know who grew up outside the south said they had fun for a year or two but then it was pretty cringy.
Fake news.
You’ve obviously not lived in Arkansas, Alabama, Georgia, Nevada, Virginia, New York, Illinois, and Pennsylvania. You should get out more. Cultures are different.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why is it harder at Indiana? I heard similar.
Too few spots for number of girls rushing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All the women I know who grew up in the south think sorority life was the peak and defining time of their life and still mention their house when they meet new people, still wear their house colors, still identify as XYZ whenever they can.
All the women I know who grew up outside the south said they had fun for a year or two but then it was pretty cringy.
Fake news.
You’ve obviously not lived in Arkansas, Alabama, Georgia, Nevada, Virginia, New York, Illinois, and Pennsylvania. You should get out more. Cultures are different.
NP here. I am from Virginia and went to school in North Carolina. I don't know what women who grew up in the south but either your lying or know hardly anyone. Gossiping stereotypes is gross. Do better.
We just almost elected as president a woman who fits the "constantly mentions her sorority 30+ years later" stereotype pretty much to a t, and you're going to slander PP for saying it's a real thing based on your narrow experience at Chapel Hill?
Harris was a member of a Divine 9 (majority black) sorority. They’re different. Alums in those organizations stay very active after graduation and they do a ton of work in their communities. It’s more like joining the Junior League than your typical (majority white) sorority
Anonymous wrote:I did not get a bid
Anonymous wrote:Everything about sorority rush sounds awful for 18 year girls away from home for the first time. The process is a social and psychological minefield. It's like a reality tv show where the stakes are very real. To be rejected because you don't have the right purse or don't vacation on St. Barts is ridiculous. I don't know why educated families allow their daughters to participate in sororities today. It may have made sense 50 years ago to find friends and perhaps a husband. But everything about sororities today seems cruel and stupid.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All the women I know who grew up in the south think sorority life was the peak and defining time of their life and still mention their house when they meet new people, still wear their house colors, still identify as XYZ whenever they can.
All the women I know who grew up outside the south said they had fun for a year or two but then it was pretty cringy.
Fake news.
You’ve obviously not lived in Arkansas, Alabama, Georgia, Nevada, Virginia, New York, Illinois, and Pennsylvania. You should get out more. Cultures are different.
NP here. I am from Virginia and went to school in North Carolina. I don't know what women who grew up in the south but either your lying or know hardly anyone. Gossiping stereotypes is gross. Do better.
We just almost elected as president a woman who fits the "constantly mentions her sorority 30+ years later" stereotype pretty much to a t, and you're going to slander PP for saying it's a real thing based on your narrow experience at Chapel Hill?
Harris was a member of a Divine 9 (majority black) sorority. They’re different. Alums in those organizations stay very active after graduation and they do a ton of work in their communities. It’s more like joining the Junior League than your typical (majority white) sorority
Anonymous wrote:I did not get a bid