Anonymous wrote:I am jealous of parents who have kids for whom school comes more easily, without the difficulties my kid with learning disabilities has. But I'm not jealous because of their college admissions.
Anonymous wrote:I would only be jealous if the kid who mercilessly bullied and hurt my kid got into a school deemed "higher" than my kid. It's immature, but just being honest. For all others, I am happy for them. I know that this whole admissions process was hard on a lot of kids.
Anonymous wrote:This is an anonymous forum, so let’s be real: do you get jealous when your kids’ friends and classmates get admitted to more prestigious colleges than your kids?
Anonymous wrote:Not jealous. Sometimes anxious about the American economy, and how my kids will fare given the widening chasm between haves and have-nots.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Three pages of posters who don’t know the difference between jealousy and envy, yet think that their kid should have gotten into a better school…..
Oh, please. We all know what OP meant, and so did you.
Anonymous wrote:Three pages of posters who don’t know the difference between jealousy and envy, yet think that their kid should have gotten into a better school…..
Anonymous wrote:No.
I don't want the things most people here want. I think big state schools suck for undergrad, and I'm secretly thrilled DC doesn't have a shot at College Park. I'm jealous, maybe a little, of people whose kids are going to Chicago or Williams or Swarthmore... but I don't have that kind of kid. I have the 60-110 US News &World Report kid.
I have also come to realize this is the tranche of American schools I like the most.
Anonymous wrote:I am genuinely happy when I hear of kids who get into great schools. I know they had to work super hard. My kids were not lazy by any means, but they didn’t make the huge sacrifices. They just followed their natural interests and curiosities both academically and in terms of ECs.
I will admit I’m jealous that other kids have more options financially. My kids were limited to applying in-state and to schools with generous merit aid. While they are very happy with where they landed, there are a few schools I think would have provided a really nice experience (not due to the status but environment) if we could have afforded them. But I don’t waste much time on that because they are very lucky to be able to graduate in 4 years with no debt and not everybody can.
Anonymous wrote:No but people are jealous of me and where my kids got in.