Anonymous wrote:What’s the deal with sororities and Instagram?
All these sorority ladies at GW, PAC-10, and SEC schools have public profiles. All seem to have a minimum of 2500 followers.
It seems like there’s now a minimum follower requirement for many sororities. Are they buying fake followers? It’s crazy how much they are exposing themselves for all the world to see.
Anonymous wrote:I was an engineering major at MIT. Being in a sorority was a way for me to meet other females when I otherwise spent so much of my time in male-dominated environments and kept me from burying myself in the library for hours on end. *shrug* There was drama, of course, I think the deeply anti-sorority folks harbor a lot of subconscious misogynistic attitudes about women. [/quote]
This. I wasn't in a sorority but still managed to hook up with frat boys and drink to excess without it. There's good and bad in everything, and I find the rabid anti- Greek attitudes here over the top.
Anonymous wrote:I was an engineering major at MIT. Being in a sorority was a way for me to meet other females when I otherwise spent so much of my time in male-dominated environments and kept me from burying myself in the library for hours on end. *shrug* There was drama, of course, I think the deeply anti-sorority folks harbor a lot of subconscious misogynistic attitudes about women.
Anonymous wrote:I was in what was considered a "top" sorority at UVa late 80s-early 90s. It wasn't perfect, but it was great fun, and I made friends who are still there for me.
Anonymous wrote:
I pledged one of the biggest, oldest sororities in the country as a freshman -- and I loved it. I went through rush on a lark, just to see the beautiful sorority houses and meet people (rush was before school started at my huge SEC school).
As rush week wore on, I realized there was one sorority I would feel totally at home at, much to my surprise. It was still new to the campus and the women were really smart and amazing. Not stereotypes. I got in and had a great three years (like most women, by senior year I was phasing out of sorority life). I was never hazed, forced to drink, or forced to do anything I didn't want to.
Joining a sorority gave my a smaller group of 100ish women to bond with on my campus of 30,000 plus. It gave me a lot of leadership experience. It wasn't all perfect -- I lost out on a post I really wanted -- but even that was a learning experience.
Throughout the years, I've used my sorority connections whenever I moved to a new city. It's a shortcut to connecting into the community -- these women helped my find the best doctors, schools and other resources, and welcomed me and my husband into their communities.
I recently went to a reunion of my chapter with women who were all at school the same time as me. I wondered how it would be after all these years.
It was fabulous.
Turns out I would have missed a ton if I hadn't joined a sorority.