Anonymous wrote:Hey, all you Carles. How 'bout St. Olaf winning the Cereal Bowl (again...)? Um Ya Ya!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My daughter hates the heat and is really looking at Northeast, and upper Midwest. She has a tendency to be lazy outside of sports and my concern is those cold/snowy winter months are tough on the kids as there is no sitting outside, picnicking, socializing outside etc... I feel like it is a recipe for depression and loneliness. I am trying to steer her towards some southern/western schools emphasizing she won't be there during the summer. She loves the snow but rarely skis and not sure if all these colleges up north will benifit her emotionally.
Any feedback would be great.
I don't mean this cruelly, but you come across as VERY helicoptery with this post. Does your daughter honestly think that it's not in the 90's in the summer in New York and New England? Have you never heard of skiing? Snowboarding? Ice skating? The winter Olympics? There are a slew of cold-weather sports. Plus all the sports normally played indoors - yoga, basketball, volleyball, swimming, etc. Plus, do you honestly think every kid who lives somewhere that has true winters is fat and lazy? Come on! There are more ways to socialize than by picnicking. Hell, I'm 41 and have only been to two picnics in my entire life.
I think you're completely wrong in the direction you're pushing her. Kids change a lot in college.
I am not a helicopter. My daughters grades get lower in the winter. Whether that is because of SAD, her not playing a winter sport (she plays fall/spring) or something else - but it has been obvious since 7th grade. She has had 2 bouts of mild depressions and they were both after the holidays. She tends to hermit in the winter regardless of her so called new likeness to the colder weather. She isn't a go-getter social butterfly like my other 2 are.
I am not directing her towards or away from any college. Never said that. I asked one f'ing question about how kids from this area handle the 3-4 months of snow on the ground of a cold climate and the really short days like Boston area. I can have a mild concern, can I not? Pretty sure I know my daughter better than you so please stop assuming what I think or I am projecting my hate of winter? Never said that as I love the winter. Ski more than my kids do and run year round. But yes, assume I have seasonal disorder and what will I be scared to go visit?Never once said everyone in cold climates is fat and lazy?? You are truly reaching PP. Nice try.
I appreciate the very few who have responded so far.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My daughter hates the heat and is really looking at Northeast, and upper Midwest. She has a tendency to be lazy outside of sports and my concern is those cold/snowy winter months are tough on the kids as there is no sitting outside, picnicking, socializing outside etc... I feel like it is a recipe for depression and loneliness. I am trying to steer her towards some southern/western schools emphasizing she won't be there during the summer. She loves the snow but rarely skis and not sure if all these colleges up north will benifit her emotionally.
Any feedback would be great.
I don't mean this cruelly, but you come across as VERY helicoptery with this post. Does your daughter honestly think that it's not in the 90's in the summer in New York and New England? Have you never heard of skiing? Snowboarding? Ice skating? The winter Olympics? There are a slew of cold-weather sports. Plus all the sports normally played indoors - yoga, basketball, volleyball, swimming, etc. Plus, do you honestly think every kid who lives somewhere that has true winters is fat and lazy? Come on! There are more ways to socialize than by picnicking. Hell, I'm 41 and have only been to two picnics in my entire life.
I think you're completely wrong in the direction you're pushing her. Kids change a lot in college.
Never once said everyone in cold climates is fat and lazy?? You are truly reaching PP. Nice try.
Anonymous wrote:A third Carleton grad, in my case originally from Florida. I don't think it's a coincidence that so many of us grads opened this thread, because Carleton students spend so much time outside in the winter despite the cold. I loved trying cross-country skiing and ice skating as PE classes and playing broomball and sledding with friends. And I, too, played indoor soccer.
So my lessons learned: 1) Pay more attention to the activity level of the school population (and what they do for fun) than worrying about exactly how cold a place is. 2) When headed to live in a cold place, don't buy gear intended for a warmer climate! (I'm sure now everything can be bought online, but back when I was in college, I wished I had waited and bought my coat in Minnesota.)
So it's really a matter of school culture. That said, I didn't find the weather depressing at all. It was sunny a lot and the cold was bracing. Agree on waiting to buy the coat!Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^^ I agree with the above post.
But I do wonder if the OP just wrote what she did because she was bored and couldn't think of anything interesting or truly provocative to write.
OP you're American, correct? You know that this great nation has many climates? And many people exist within and thrive amongst these cold places?
Actually I'd be more worried about the South with the current devastating storms etc, than a bit of snow up North...
I think the OP may have serious concerns about her daughter's tendency towards depression and is honing in on cold climate as a trigger.
Anonymous wrote:Hey, all you Carles. How 'bout St. Olaf winning the Cereal Bowl (again...)? Um Ya Ya!
Anonymous wrote:Hey, all you Carles. How 'bout St. Olaf winning the Cereal Bowl (again...)? Um Ya Ya!
Anonymous wrote:^^ I agree with the above post.
But I do wonder if the OP just wrote what she did because she was bored and couldn't think of anything interesting or truly provocative to write.
OP you're American, correct? You know that this great nation has many climates? And many people exist within and thrive amongst these cold places?
Actually I'd be more worried about the South with the current devastating storms etc, than a bit of snow up North...