Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am realistic. One kid we know, who was very similar to mine except from a rich family and elite private, got into a more highly ranked school. I Know it was in part due to their full pay status. Still, I only wanted each of our kids to be happy. Mine, as it turns out, adjusted better than the other kid...which made me sad for her family (not secretly happy or anything).
These are adolescents, older children in effect. How could you wish them anything but success?
I sense schadenfreude here, and often, on DCUM.
Maybe the kid is more qualified, or maybe that kid fit the "slot" (that the school wanted/needed) better than you kid, and that is okay.
Full pay is something - EXCEPT if the kid does not have the grades or the fit, then full pay is nothing.
Except the poster literally said she felt bad for the other family…so there is no reason to infer that she was secretly happy about their misfortune.
Perhaps you are projecting, or using the word incorrectly?
Anonymous wrote:I feel amazed that they are willing to pay $80K+ per year for each year of undergraduate education for multiple kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Jealousy is bad look for parents and kids.
Not if they're talking about it on an anonymous website, rather than actually with their kids, family, and friends.![]()
Anonymous wrote:Think my neighbor lied about ethnicity.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Think my neighbor lied about ethnicity.
I don’t think race or ethnicity matter as much anymore as HHI/SES and family education levels. Colleges are much more interested in a poor kid or 1st gen to college candidate than a rich POC. [/quote]
LOL no. Quite the opposite.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid is in ES so no personal experience yet.
Just philosophizing. I went to a “bad” gigantic school, my graduating class was like 750 kids l think. I was a nerd and my parents didn’t care, they didn’t even know what schools l applied to or what l was going to study until l was already in. So this angst parents here are feeling is foreign to me.
I will of course be helping my kid, but it’s nice to have a bit of perspective.
Of course because back in the day this was common and you didn’t go to a high school where your parents were invested. Parents just didn’t care as much because they had no reason too and the world was not so “in your face competitive” before social media and college stats at our fingertips via multiple internet sites. There is teams of research and stats Abdul’s me to everyone now that’s makes it clear how much better people do who go to good colleges. It’s a new world PP and I bet you will be eating these words by time your kid is a senior.
Anonymous wrote:My kid is in ES so no personal experience yet.
Just philosophizing. I went to a “bad” gigantic school, my graduating class was like 750 kids l think. I was a nerd and my parents didn’t care, they didn’t even know what schools l applied to or what l was going to study until l was already in. So this angst parents here are feeling is foreign to me.
I will of course be helping my kid, but it’s nice to have a bit of perspective.
Anonymous wrote:Think my neighbor lied about ethnicity.
Anonymous wrote:Jealousy is bad look for parents and kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
How to quell the disappointment/jealousy/sadness/curiosity when other kids who may or may not seem to have lower stats etc get in to much better schools than your DC?
I know they might have had something "else" in their application that we don't know about, but still...comparison is hard...
What do you mean by this op![]()