Anonymous wrote:It’s state school. go in, get the degree, and go live life.
Anonymous wrote:Hmmm now that I think about it several guys I know who went to large state universities do not have friends from those universities. They weren’t Greek and they didn’t play a sport in college. Meanwhile a bunch of us from private colleges had our college friends in our wedding parties. We’re old now. No one cares. And since college they do have friends from work sports leagues extended family friends etc. Maybe the alert uni’s are impersonal and hard to connect if you aren’t involved in something deeply? tBH I think it’s fine OP.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He's going to look back in 20 years and regret that he just existed in college instead of embracing the experience. I've noticed that men who join fraternities don't have these regrets. It's true with my cohort, and I see it with my own college kid (a fraternity man) and his old high school buddies when they reconvene at breaks. Get a bunch of old fraternity guys together even 50 years after graduation and it's nonstop reminiscing about parties, tailgates, girls, and various hijinks. Everyone is topping the last guy with a crazier story from the good old days when they were gods on campus and the world was their oyster. Can you imagine your son in 20 or 30 years trying to tell a crazy college story? "Well I had my headset on and I was deep into a wild game of Fortnite with my high school friends..." No thanks. I know he's a junior, but you should still encourage him to rush.
I can’t imagine something more pathetic. This whole post must be AI. No human is this much of a loser.
-Chi Psi /Alpha Omicron Delta class of ‘89
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hmmm now that I think about it several guys I know who went to large state universities do not have friends from those universities. They weren’t Greek and they didn’t play a sport in college. Meanwhile a bunch of us from private colleges had our college friends in our wedding parties. We’re old now. No one cares. And since college they do have friends from work sports leagues extended family friends etc. Maybe the alert uni’s are impersonal and hard to connect if you aren’t involved in something deeply? tBH I think it’s fine OP.
Bullcrap. How would you know this ?
Anonymous wrote:He's going to look back in 20 years and regret that he just existed in college instead of embracing the experience. I've noticed that men who join fraternities don't have these regrets. It's true with my cohort, and I see it with my own college kid (a fraternity man) and his old high school buddies when they reconvene at breaks. Get a bunch of old fraternity guys together even 50 years after graduation and it's nonstop reminiscing about parties, tailgates, girls, and various hijinks. Everyone is topping the last guy with a crazier story from the good old days when they were gods on campus and the world was their oyster. Can you imagine your son in 20 or 30 years trying to tell a crazy college story? "Well I had my headset on and I was deep into a wild game of Fortnite with my high school friends..." No thanks. I know he's a junior, but you should still encourage him to rush.
Anonymous wrote:He's going to look back in 20 years and regret that he just existed in college instead of embracing the experience. I've noticed that men who join fraternities don't have these regrets. It's true with my cohort, and I see it with my own college kid (a fraternity man) and his old high school buddies when they reconvene at breaks. Get a bunch of old fraternity guys together even 50 years after graduation and it's nonstop reminiscing about parties, tailgates, girls, and various hijinks. Everyone is topping the last guy with a crazier story from the good old days when they were gods on campus and the world was their oyster. Can you imagine your son in 20 or 30 years trying to tell a crazy college story? "Well I had my headset on and I was deep into a wild game of Fortnite with my high school friends..." No thanks. I know he's a junior, but you should still encourage him to rush.
Anonymous wrote:Hmmm now that I think about it several guys I know who went to large state universities do not have friends from those universities. They weren’t Greek and they didn’t play a sport in college. Meanwhile a bunch of us from private colleges had our college friends in our wedding parties. We’re old now. No one cares. And since college they do have friends from work sports leagues extended family friends etc. Maybe the alert uni’s are impersonal and hard to connect if you aren’t involved in something deeply? tBH I think it’s fine OP.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He's going to look back in 20 years and regret that he just existed in college instead of embracing the experience. I've noticed that men who join fraternities don't have these regrets. It's true with my cohort, and I see it with my own college kid (a fraternity man) and his old high school buddies when they reconvene at breaks. Get a bunch of old fraternity guys together even 50 years after graduation and it's nonstop reminiscing about parties, tailgates, girls, and various hijinks. Everyone is topping the last guy with a crazier story from the good old days when they were gods on campus and the world was their oyster. Can you imagine your son in 20 or 30 years trying to tell a crazy college story? "Well I had my headset on and I was deep into a wild game of Fortnite with my high school friends..." No thanks. I know he's a junior, but you should still encourage him to rush.
I can’t imagine something more pathetic. This whole post must be AI. No human is this much of a loser.
-Chi Psi /Alpha Omicron Delta class of ‘89
Anonymous wrote:He's going to look back in 20 years and regret that he just existed in college instead of embracing the experience. I've noticed that men who join fraternities don't have these regrets. It's true with my cohort, and I see it with my own college kid (a fraternity man) and his old high school buddies when they reconvene at breaks. Get a bunch of old fraternity guys together even 50 years after graduation and it's nonstop reminiscing about parties, tailgates, girls, and various hijinks. Everyone is topping the last guy with a crazier story from the good old days when they were gods on campus and the world was their oyster. Can you imagine your son in 20 or 30 years trying to tell a crazy college story? "Well I had my headset on and I was deep into a wild game of Fortnite with my high school friends..." No thanks. I know he's a junior, but you should still encourage him to rush.
Anonymous wrote:He has a girlfriend and he is happy with the state of his relationship.
He is in a (still) high demand major. He is not clubbing, smoking, doing drugs, drinking, whoring around. He is safe in his room (less chance to be killed by a shooter in USA).
All is good.