Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hope your kid likes cold weather
Enough with the cold weather fear mongering.
Anonymous wrote:My twins got into harvard REA, but now we're really regretting applying there. They don't know if they should be happy while they wait on others. This is really stressing our family out right now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You’re basically posting a bogus expression of regret to get everyone to tell you what a fantastic school your kid has gotten into and how great s/he must be. B/c if you’re serious, you’re an idiot.
OP here. No. No desire for anonymous public acclaim. And I do feel like a bit of an idiot. It is a very good school of course. Hopefully, this is merely buyer's remorse.
OP - can you give us an idea of *why* you are feeling buyers remorse? It sounds like its more you than your DC... or are they feeling this way as well? I'm just curious - it's obviously a lottery ticket school, your kid shot their shot and got in. Is it financial woes?
OP here. Not financial issues. Honestly, worried that DC may not be up to the Chicago challenge.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You’re basically posting a bogus expression of regret to get everyone to tell you what a fantastic school your kid has gotten into and how great s/he must be. B/c if you’re serious, you’re an idiot.
OP here. No. No desire for anonymous public acclaim. And I do feel like a bit of an idiot. It is a very good school of course. Hopefully, this is merely buyer's remorse.
OP - can you give us an idea of *why* you are feeling buyers remorse? It sounds like its more you than your DC... or are they feeling this way as well? I'm just curious - it's obviously a lottery ticket school, your kid shot their shot and got in. Is it financial woes?
OP here. Not financial issues. Honestly, worried that DC may not be up to the Chicago challenge.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You’re basically posting a bogus expression of regret to get everyone to tell you what a fantastic school your kid has gotten into and how great s/he must be. B/c if you’re serious, you’re an idiot.
Hello, captain obvious, on many levels. (a) this entire forum involves people trying to get validation of whatever they’re obsessed about and (b) yes, OP is an idiot.
More than likely it is the resident DCUM anti-UChicago troll. If you haven't noticed, UChicago, WashU and NEU get attacked by the same woman, constantly, in and out of context.
Anonymous wrote:DS had same feeling after ED1 last year. Buyers remorse is common. He’s now loving it as a first year student. The buyers remorse started to wane last year after he saw many of the RD rejections. By late March he was relieved, and by October he was having a great time. Every kid is different of course, but that’s our experience in case it’s informative.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP - Can you give us some insight on whether it was your kid’s decision or your decision to apply ED2. To the extent it was your decision that your kid went along with but wasn’t excited about, how much did desperation/anxiety to go to a brand name school play into that? And was that desperation driven by your desire to tell others that your kid is at a brand name school or do you honestly think that he will have a better life as a result and thus it was worth overriding what your child actually wanted?
Op here. Dc's decision on EDII. TBH, after not getting in ED, a kind of panic set in about bot getting in to a good school. Hence EDII.
Is your kid worried or just you? Not judging, just asking because I am more stressed than my kid!
It's a great school and city- he should be proud. If he is unhappy, as others said, he can always transfer. Grass is always greener
Is there a school he got into EA or RD that he's a lot more excited about? Or no, but he's just second guessing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP - Can you give us some insight on whether it was your kid’s decision or your decision to apply ED2. To the extent it was your decision that your kid went along with but wasn’t excited about, how much did desperation/anxiety to go to a brand name school play into that? And was that desperation driven by your desire to tell others that your kid is at a brand name school or do you honestly think that he will have a better life as a result and thus it was worth overriding what your child actually wanted?
Op here. Dc's decision on EDII. TBH, after not getting in ED, a kind of panic set in about bot getting in to a good school. Hence EDII.
Is your kid worried or just you? Not judging, just asking because I am more stressed than my kid!
It's a great school and city- he should be proud. If he is unhappy, as others said, he can always transfer. Grass is always greener
Is there a school he got into EA or RD that he's a lot more excited about? Or no, but he's just second guessing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP - Can you give us some insight on whether it was your kid’s decision or your decision to apply ED2. To the extent it was your decision that your kid went along with but wasn’t excited about, how much did desperation/anxiety to go to a brand name school play into that? And was that desperation driven by your desire to tell others that your kid is at a brand name school or do you honestly think that he will have a better life as a result and thus it was worth overriding what your child actually wanted?
Op here. Dc's decision on EDII. TBH, after not getting in ED, a kind of panic set in about bot getting in to a good school. Hence EDII.
Is your kid worried or just you? Not judging, just asking because I am more stressed than my kid!
It's a great school and city- he should be proud. If he is unhappy, as others said, he can always transfer. Grass is always greener
Is there a school he got into EA or RD that he's a lot more excited about? Or no, but he's just second guessing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP - Can you give us some insight on whether it was your kid’s decision or your decision to apply ED2. To the extent it was your decision that your kid went along with but wasn’t excited about, how much did desperation/anxiety to go to a brand name school play into that? And was that desperation driven by your desire to tell others that your kid is at a brand name school or do you honestly think that he will have a better life as a result and thus it was worth overriding what your child actually wanted?
Op here. Dc's decision on EDII. TBH, after not getting in ED, a kind of panic set in about bot getting in to a good school. Hence EDII.