Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would think it could be perfectly healthy to hang out with friends and bake and cake and trash the schools that rejected you.
But I'd be livid if my kid posted that on social media. Yes even if my kid was a legal adult at the time. It's not a good look.
Even better, hang out with friends and bake a cake to celebrate all the schools that ACCEPTED you - and don't make stupid social media videos to self-congratulate.
And even better than THAT? Stop watching stupid videos on social media that make you feel bad, like a loser, or a failure. Simple - don't watch.
Getting rejected by Yale is not a failure. Getting accepted by "fill in the blank school" is a success.
This is why no one likes your generation.
Anonymous wrote:This is a healthy way to deal with college rejections:
https://www.usatoday.com/story/life/health-wellness/2025/04/25/college-acceptance-cakes-rejection-trend/83236768007/?tbref=hp
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would think it could be perfectly healthy to hang out with friends and bake and cake and trash the schools that rejected you.
But I'd be livid if my kid posted that on social media. Yes even if my kid was a legal adult at the time. It's not a good look.
Even better, hang out with friends and bake a cake to celebrate all the schools that ACCEPTED you - and don't make stupid social media videos to self-congratulate.
And even better than THAT? Stop watching stupid videos on social media that make you feel bad, like a loser, or a failure. Simple - don't watch.
Getting rejected by Yale is not a failure. Getting accepted by "fill in the blank school" is a success.
Anonymous wrote:Driven by the need for social media. I pity this generation.
Anonymous wrote:Seems a fun way to cope!
Anonymous wrote:There must be countless cakes like this for UVA, a school which dishes out more summary rejections than almost any other, without ANY marketing. Very unfortunate for those unfortunate people who receive summary rejections, for there is no appeals process. Very sad for those unfortunate people. ;(
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would think it could be perfectly healthy to hang out with friends and bake and cake and trash the schools that rejected you.
But I'd be livid if my kid posted that on social media. Yes even if my kid was a legal adult at the time. It's not a good look.
Even better, hang out with friends and bake a cake to celebrate all the schools that ACCEPTED you - and don't make stupid social media videos to self-congratulate.
And even better than THAT? Stop watching stupid videos on social media that make you feel bad, like a loser, or a failure. Simple - don't watch.
Getting rejected by Yale is not a failure. Getting accepted by "fill in the blank school" is a success.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There must be countless cakes like this for UVA, a school which dishes out more summary rejections than almost any other, without ANY marketing. Very unfortunate for those unfortunate people who receive summary rejections, for there is no appeals process. Very sad for those unfortunate people. ;(
UVA does marketing:
- speaks at HSs during the day
- speaks at HSs in the evenings
- heavily markets on social media (Dean J- who even posts on reddit, as well as Insta, goes live, answers questions)
- they have materials they offer at events
- tours in person/info sessions
- virtual events
- they work with alum to out on programs in all states + 16 countries to add to their diversity https://uvamagazine.org/articles/admission_faqs9
- they attend college fairs and related UVA information sessions
Etc.
Each school prioritizes what marketing works best for that school. Clearly they believe a strong social media presence helps, among others things I just listed.
Anonymous wrote:My kid said a prayer and blessed each school that didn't match, including all the ones he declined.