Anonymous wrote: Hello there -- I'm not a "hausfrau" nor have I ever been. I never stopped working but for 7 weeks after I had a c-section. So, perhaps you are the hausfrau. I run an executive search business in town and know what my business clients pay me to find. And, yes, they love people who have the discipline to have performed as DI elite athletes at elite Ivies. And, fyi...I have a daughter and not a son. Maybe you've been in the suburbs too long you little hausfrau yourself...I'm in the city in the real world.
And I agree you are a insufferable hausfrau who bases her perception of business environments on what you see in soap operas or read in your pathetic lifestyle magazines. Do any of you honestly believe your son's future employers, bosses, or clients give a rat's ass which--if any--sports your son played in high school? Sorry ladies, but you're kidding yourself.
Anonymous wrote:It would be if lax players tended to be smarter than the average bear.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Agree that person does not work on Wall Street ...has no idea how that competitive world works...and they love athletes on Wall Street and so do most employers
And I agree you are a insufferable hausfrau who bases her perception of business environments on what you see in soap operas or read in your pathetic lifestyle magazines. Do any of you honestly believe your son's future employers, bosses, or clients give a rat's ass which--if any--sports your son played in high school? Sorry ladies, but you're kidding yourself.
Anonymous wrote:Agree that person does not work on Wall Street ...has no idea how that competitive world works...and they love athletes on Wall Street and so do most employers
Anonymous wrote:Biglaw loves lacrosse players too.
Anonymous wrote:I work on wall street. Nobody gives a sh#t about lacrosse nor are we impressed with anyone who used to play lacrosse. It is a niche sport at best. I think it is a lot of fun, but realistically as a men's sport, it's a cut above badminton or fencing to the vast majority of the world.
Advice to "elitist wannabees"-- invest in golf lessons for your kids. Unless your son is a pro prospect (by pro, I mean baseball, football, or basketball), competence on the golf course is the only athletic endeavor that matters to anyone beyond the age of 22.
Anonymous wrote:I work on wall street. Nobody gives a sh#t about lacrosse nor are we impressed with anyone who used to play lacrosse. It is a niche sport at best. I think it is a lot of fun, but realistically as a men's sport, it's a cut above badminton or fencing to the vast majority of the world.
Advice to "elitist wannabees"-- invest in golf lessons for your kids. Unless your son is a pro prospect (by pro, I mean baseball, football, or basketball), competence on the golf course is the only athletic endeavor that matters to anyone beyond the age of 22.