Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:IMCP: I live in LA bc cold weather is a nightmare. Like it can really cause actual physical pain on your skin.
So can too much sun.
Not really. Sun has amazing health benefits. You'd have to get *a lot* to cause problems, like be out all day.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:IMCP: I live in LA bc cold weather is a nightmare. Like it can really cause actual physical pain on your skin.
So can too much sun.
Not really. Sun has amazing health benefits. You'd have to get *a lot* to cause problems, like be out all day.
Heat exhaustion, heat stroke, skin cancer. None of those require you to be out all day.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m currently in TX (obligatory visit to ILs) and even they aren’t immune from this cold
My kid is currently obsessed with a school on Michigan’s UP. I am not against it, but we definitely need to get her much better winter gear.
My kid goes to school in MI and went to boarding school in MA. He said MI is another level of cold from New England, and basically never wears coats here in DC anymore. Today might be an exception though.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:IMCP: I live in LA bc cold weather is a nightmare. Like it can really cause actual physical pain on your skin.
So can too much sun.
Not really. Sun has amazing health benefits. You'd have to get *a lot* to cause problems, like be out all day.
Anonymous wrote:I’m currently in TX (obligatory visit to ILs) and even they aren’t immune from this cold
My kid is currently obsessed with a school on Michigan’s UP. I am not against it, but we definitely need to get her much better winter gear.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:IMCP: I live in LA bc cold weather is a nightmare. Like it can really cause actual physical pain on your skin.
So can too much sun.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I thought if you bought enough North Face jackets, you could do anything.
Canada Goose
So boujee.
Anonymous wrote:IMCP: I live in LA bc cold weather is a nightmare. Like it can really cause actual physical pain on your skin.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DMV types are pathetic. My memories of winter at Dartmouth are some of the best and most distinctive of my college career. Beautiful snow-covered campus, well heated classrooms and dorms, immediately plowed sidewalks and paths, the same walkable community. And a short van ride to the Dartmouth skiway after classes end. if you don't have to drive to work, or change in and out of work shoes, or shovel your driveway -- or show off your limbs or cleavage -- crisp winter weather is fantastic. But go ahead, direct your kids to "up and coming" schools in the South. One suspects Northern schools are probably better off without kids whose choice of college is swayed by cold weather.
I had a very similar experience to you at Andover and think you sound super haughty and arrogant. Let people choose what they want and stop being so judgey.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The particulars about any specific school matters regarding whether or not severe cold weather would be a determining factor.
Not sure that I could handle 2,000 student Carleton College in Northfield, Minnesota even though it offers outstanding academics, yet I would have no difficulty attending college in cold weather locations such as Boston, Chicago, Ann Arbor, Madison, Ithaca, or Burlington, Vermont due to the student body size and the variety of numerous activities available in these non-isolated areas.
The difficulty for me would arise concerning the realities of dream schools like Middlebury College, Dartmouth College, Bowdoin College, Williams College, etc., which offer outstanding academics in a small community of high achievers, yet are located in rural, cold-weather, fairly isolated areas. Since I like to snow ski, the answer if offered an opportunity to attend any of these dream schools would be an easy yes, but I could probably not handle attending Bates, Kenyon, Carleton, unless I was a two-sport college athlete as the down time non-academic aspects are too limited and unattractive for my individual personality.
So long as one is aware of the realities of attending a small, rural, isolated, cold weather school, it is a matter of individual preference. Many are persuaded by generous financial aid or perceived prestige despite known shortcomings--and that is just part of life. Realities and decisions regarding one's options often override individual preferences. In short, specifics matter.
This seems oddly like it was written like a bot.
Anonymous wrote:I went to college in upstate NY. It wasn't the cold or the snow that was so rough. It was the length of the winter and the lack of sun. That was not for me.
Anonymous wrote:DMV types are pathetic. My memories of winter at Dartmouth are some of the best and most distinctive of my college career. Beautiful snow-covered campus, well heated classrooms and dorms, immediately plowed sidewalks and paths, the same walkable community. And a short van ride to the Dartmouth skiway after classes end. if you don't have to drive to work, or change in and out of work shoes, or shovel your driveway -- or show off your limbs or cleavage -- crisp winter weather is fantastic. But go ahead, direct your kids to "up and coming" schools in the South. One suspects Northern schools are probably better off without kids whose choice of college is swayed by cold weather.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I thought if you bought enough North Face jackets, you could do anything.
Canada Goose