Anonymous wrote:As much as I am waiting for the results, I also want the time to go super slow.
I want the college move day to come as far away as possible .
Anonymous wrote:My TJ kid was rejected SCEA. Waiting on many schools RD. Feels fortunate for UVA acceptance, but doesn't want to go there. Says they wouldn't have had to work as hard at base high school to end up at UVA anyway.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We applied early and knew by the end of Nov. I don’t understand why students wait. Do you?
“We applied early”?
Did you apply to college too?
As in family. Parents are paying the tuition.
Yeah, of course they are. Doesn’t change the fact that it’s the kid’s process and the kid’s life.
But you know — you’ve got OP up there stressing about her kids’ applications seemingly more than they are.
Oh give it a rest. Parents can be just as invested (or not, in your case) whether they like to or not. To each their own.
They can. But it doesn’t make it healthy.
I’m so happy my parents didn’t participate in my application process at all.
I plan to stay out of my kid’s process.
LOL. Wait til your smartest kid decides he wants to study anthropology at Florida Gulf Coast University because he intends to get buff & tan & bang a bunch of babes.
“Oh and by the way, FGCU costs $100,000/yr, so better delay that retirement, dad.”
Not being involved “at all” in the college application process is like buying a house without even seeing a picture of it. When 18 year olds can again afford college on the proceeds of a summer job, parents will happily duck out of the picture.
I was class of 2009 for college. It was expensive.
My parents trusted my college counselor and I to handle it.
and me.
My college counselor and me.
Go eat a praise sandwich, Millennial.
You have no power here.
Go obsess over your kid’s college application, while you talk about how “we’re applying to college.”
Anonymous wrote:This is absolutely just a vent post since this waiting feels like such a long slog. I have twins and both got into safeties but they still have almost two more months to wait on deferral/RDs. They're doing ok with it but it feels so unsettling to me. And then it will be a rush to visit admitted student days in April, make decisions, etc. I know it's all part of the process -- and again I'm just whining since I can't do it anywhere else -- but I've lost any of the college excitement with all this waiting. Vent over.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We applied early and knew by the end of Nov. I don’t understand why students wait. Do you?
“We applied early”?
Did you apply to college too?
As in family. Parents are paying the tuition.
Yeah, of course they are. Doesn’t change the fact that it’s the kid’s process and the kid’s life.
But you know — you’ve got OP up there stressing about her kids’ applications seemingly more than they are.
Oh give it a rest. Parents can be just as invested (or not, in your case) whether they like to or not. To each their own.
They can. But it doesn’t make it healthy.
I’m so happy my parents didn’t participate in my application process at all.
I plan to stay out of my kid’s process.
LOL. Wait til your smartest kid decides he wants to study anthropology at Florida Gulf Coast University because he intends to get buff & tan & bang a bunch of babes.
“Oh and by the way, FGCU costs $100,000/yr, so better delay that retirement, dad.”
Not being involved “at all” in the college application process is like buying a house without even seeing a picture of it. When 18 year olds can again afford college on the proceeds of a summer job, parents will happily duck out of the picture.
I was class of 2009 for college. It was expensive.
My parents trusted my college counselor and I to handle it.
and me.
My college counselor and me.
Go eat a praise sandwich, Millennial.
You have no power here.
Go obsess over your kid’s college application, while you talk about how “we’re applying to college.”
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We applied early and knew by the end of Nov. I don’t understand why students wait. Do you?
“We applied early”?
Did you apply to college too?
As in family. Parents are paying the tuition.
Yeah, of course they are. Doesn’t change the fact that it’s the kid’s process and the kid’s life.
But you know — you’ve got OP up there stressing about her kids’ applications seemingly more than they are.
Oh give it a rest. Parents can be just as invested (or not, in your case) whether they like to or not. To each their own.
They can. But it doesn’t make it healthy.
I’m so happy my parents didn’t participate in my application process at all.
I plan to stay out of my kid’s process.
You have no child going through this process, and no clue how much it has changed since the 90’s. Yet you are qualified to judge the OP harshly (and repeatedly) in a public forum? Your antipathy towards other parents is what’s unhealthy.
Don’t you have a hobby?
I’m not old enough to have gone to college in the 90s.
I’m just calling you all out for being way too invested in this process.
NP. I have a child going through the process and I went to college in 90s. A lot has changed but reality is that the overwhelming majority of kids are waiting until spring to finalize where they are going. What has changed is how much we expect instant gratification. But in adult life sometimes we have to wait for life to play and we have to savor the moment too. This is good practice for the future.
Separately I think on this board, there is quite a lot of blurring of emotional lines between kid and parent. While it likely occurs in real life too, people are much more conscious of how the come off, so I don’t see think we are an extreme here.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We applied early and knew by the end of Nov. I don’t understand why students wait. Do you?
“We applied early”?
Did you apply to college too?
As in family. Parents are paying the tuition.
Yeah, of course they are. Doesn’t change the fact that it’s the kid’s process and the kid’s life.
But you know — you’ve got OP up there stressing about her kids’ applications seemingly more than they are.
Oh give it a rest. Parents can be just as invested (or not, in your case) whether they like to or not. To each their own.
They can. But it doesn’t make it healthy.
I’m so happy my parents didn’t participate in my application process at all.
I plan to stay out of my kid’s process.
You have no child going through this process, and no clue how much it has changed since the 90’s. Yet you are qualified to judge the OP harshly (and repeatedly) in a public forum? Your antipathy towards other parents is what’s unhealthy.
Don’t you have a hobby?
I’m not old enough to have gone to college in the 90s.
I’m just calling you all out for being way too invested in this process.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We applied early and knew by the end of Nov. I don’t understand why students wait. Do you?
“We applied early”?
Did you apply to college too?
As in family. Parents are paying the tuition.
Yeah, of course they are. Doesn’t change the fact that it’s the kid’s process and the kid’s life.
But you know — you’ve got OP up there stressing about her kids’ applications seemingly more than they are.
Oh give it a rest. Parents can be just as invested (or not, in your case) whether they like to or not. To each their own.
They can. But it doesn’t make it healthy.
I’m so happy my parents didn’t participate in my application process at all.
I plan to stay out of my kid’s process.
LOL. Wait til your smartest kid decides he wants to study anthropology at Florida Gulf Coast University because he intends to get buff & tan & bang a bunch of babes.
“Oh and by the way, FGCU costs $100,000/yr, so better delay that retirement, dad.”
Not being involved “at all” in the college application process is like buying a house without even seeing a picture of it. When 18 year olds can again afford college on the proceeds of a summer job, parents will happily duck out of the picture.
I was class of 2009 for college. It was expensive.
My parents trusted my college counselor and I to handle it.
and me.
My college counselor and me.
Go eat a praise sandwich, Millennial.
You have no power here.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We applied early and knew by the end of Nov. I don’t understand why students wait. Do you?
“We applied early”?
Did you apply to college too?
As in family. Parents are paying the tuition.
Yeah, of course they are. Doesn’t change the fact that it’s the kid’s process and the kid’s life.
But you know — you’ve got OP up there stressing about her kids’ applications seemingly more than they are.
Oh give it a rest. Parents can be just as invested (or not, in your case) whether they like to or not. To each their own.
They can. But it doesn’t make it healthy.
I’m so happy my parents didn’t participate in my application process at all.
I plan to stay out of my kid’s process.
LOL. Wait til your smartest kid decides he wants to study anthropology at Florida Gulf Coast University because he intends to get buff & tan & bang a bunch of babes.
“Oh and by the way, FGCU costs $100,000/yr, so better delay that retirement, dad.”
Not being involved “at all” in the college application process is like buying a house without even seeing a picture of it. When 18 year olds can again afford college on the proceeds of a summer job, parents will happily duck out of the picture.
I was class of 2009 for college. It was expensive.
My parents trusted my college counselor and I to handle it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We applied early and knew by the end of Nov. I don’t understand why students wait. Do you?
“We applied early”?
Did you apply to college too?
As in family. Parents are paying the tuition.
Yeah, of course they are. Doesn’t change the fact that it’s the kid’s process and the kid’s life.
But you know — you’ve got OP up there stressing about her kids’ applications seemingly more than they are.
Oh give it a rest. Parents can be just as invested (or not, in your case) whether they like to or not. To each their own.
They can. But it doesn’t make it healthy.
I’m so happy my parents didn’t participate in my application process at all.
I plan to stay out of my kid’s process.
LOL. Wait til your smartest kid decides he wants to study anthropology at Florida Gulf Coast University because he intends to get buff & tan & bang a bunch of babes.
“Oh and by the way, FGCU costs $100,000/yr, so better delay that retirement, dad.”
Not being involved “at all” in the college application process is like buying a house without even seeing a picture of it. When 18 year olds can again afford college on the proceeds of a summer job, parents will happily duck out of the picture.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We applied early and knew by the end of Nov. I don’t understand why students wait. Do you?
“We applied early”?
Did you apply to college too?
As in family. Parents are paying the tuition.
Yeah, of course they are. Doesn’t change the fact that it’s the kid’s process and the kid’s life.
But you know — you’ve got OP up there stressing about her kids’ applications seemingly more than they are.
Oh give it a rest. Parents can be just as invested (or not, in your case) whether they like to or not. To each their own.
They can. But it doesn’t make it healthy.
I’m so happy my parents didn’t participate in my application process at all.
I plan to stay out of my kid’s process.
LOL. Wait til your smartest kid decides he wants to study anthropology at Florida Gulf Coast University because he intends to get buff & tan & bang a bunch of babes.