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:Anonymous wrote:I am surprised by some of the "stupid" responses. We are in Los Angeles, too and DD and her the boyfriend decided to do the same thing. DD applied only to music conservatories back east and her boyfriend applied to colleges only in California. Both got into top programs and they broke up. Second semester, their junior year, they had a chance meeting in Europe and started dating again - long distance until he graduated and then he joined her in NY. They were married a year later.
So... not so stupid. He got into a top medical school and she graduated from the top music school in the country and is now a professional musician.
Well with a sample size of one then we must conclude it is a brilliant idea.
Yet with a sample size of zero, you are concluding that it is "stupid"?
I also think OP's son and his girlfriend are making a good decision.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
So, the deliberately excluded schools on the coast the other was going to? A kid (and parents, if they're paying) should make college decisions based on what's best for her. Excluding schools because your BF is applying to schools in that half of the country is stupid.
+1
Anonymous wrote:I am surprised by some of the "stupid" responses. We are in Los Angeles, too and DD and her the boyfriend decided to do the same thing. DD applied only to music conservatories back east and her boyfriend applied to colleges only in California. Both got into top programs and they broke up. Second semester, their junior year, they had a chance meeting in Europe and started dating again - long distance until he graduated and then he joined her in NY. They were married a year later.
So... not so stupid. He got into a top medical school and she graduated from the top music school in the country and is now a professional musician.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am surprised by some of the "stupid" responses. We are in Los Angeles, too and DD and her the boyfriend decided to do the same thing. DD applied only to music conservatories back east and her boyfriend applied to colleges only in California. Both got into top programs and they broke up. Second semester, their junior year, they had a chance meeting in Europe and started dating again - long distance until he graduated and then he joined her in NY. They were married a year later.
So... not so stupid. He got into a top medical school and she graduated from the top music school in the country and is now a professional musician.
Well with a sample size of one then we must conclude it is a brilliant idea.
Anonymous wrote:I am surprised by some of the "stupid" responses. We are in Los Angeles, too and DD and her the boyfriend decided to do the same thing. DD applied only to music conservatories back east and her boyfriend applied to colleges only in California. Both got into top programs and they broke up. Second semester, their junior year, they had a chance meeting in Europe and started dating again - long distance until he graduated and then he joined her in NY. They were married a year later.
So... not so stupid. He got into a top medical school and she graduated from the top music school in the country and is now a professional musician.