Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To entice my kid, told DC unlimited swag if DC gets into colleges. Visited 3 on acceptance days and spent over 1k, swag for the whole family. The family still wears swag from all 3 schools and we try to match when we go out. It’s fun and don’t regret spending.
This is so weird.
To this day, I still wear tshirts and hats from my undergrad, graduate, and post doc schools. Now, I wear my kids undergrad school.
How is that the same as wearing swag from 3 random schools, 2-3 of which your child did not attend?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To entice my kid, told DC unlimited swag if DC gets into colleges. Visited 3 on acceptance days and spent over 1k, swag for the whole family. The family still wears swag from all 3 schools and we try to match when we go out. It’s fun and don’t regret spending.
More money than brains.
Don’t hate my game
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To entice my kid, told DC unlimited swag if DC gets into colleges. Visited 3 on acceptance days and spent over 1k, swag for the whole family. The family still wears swag from all 3 schools and we try to match when we go out. It’s fun and don’t regret spending.
This is so weird.
To this day, I still wear tshirts and hats from my undergrad, graduate, and post doc schools. Now, I wear my kids undergrad school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To entice my kid, told DC unlimited swag if DC gets into colleges. Visited 3 on acceptance days and spent over 1k, swag for the whole family. The family still wears swag from all 3 schools and we try to match when we go out. It’s fun and don’t regret spending.
More money than brains.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To entice my kid, told DC unlimited swag if DC gets into colleges. Visited 3 on acceptance days and spent over 1k, swag for the whole family. The family still wears swag from all 3 schools and we try to match when we go out. It’s fun and don’t regret spending.
This is so weird.
Anonymous wrote:To entice my kid, told DC unlimited swag if DC gets into colleges. Visited 3 on acceptance days and spent over 1k, swag for the whole family. The family still wears swag from all 3 schools and we try to match when we go out. It’s fun and don’t regret spending.
Anonymous wrote:To entice my kid, told DC unlimited swag if DC gets into colleges. Visited 3 on acceptance days and spent over 1k, swag for the whole family. The family still wears swag from all 3 schools and we try to match when we go out. It’s fun and don’t regret spending.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I feel like I'm in an alternative universe. College t-shirts and sweatshirts are extremely common where my DC goes to HS. They are worn by kids in all grades. And, yes, plenty of people do get gear when they have visited a school they actually like.
Same here. I don't understand this thread at all. My DC has bought clothes from some of the schools she has visited and it is not a reflection on which school she hopes to get into. Kids wear all kinds of college gear to school.
Same. This thread is crazy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm sorry, but if a kid gets in to their ED, then huge congrats. Wear all the stuff and get excited. Isn't this why we applied ED? We have to hide it to not offend? Stop. Life is life. No thanks.
This! Mine was accepted EA but had some physical hurdles to clear before it was a sure thing, so we kept it quiet for two months. It was HARD. Let them wear the clothes and get excited!
You both have horrific reading comprehension skills. Hopefully your kids are better readers. Literally no one has said not to wear the clothes AFTER the admit comes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I feel like I'm in an alternative universe. College t-shirts and sweatshirts are extremely common where my DC goes to HS. They are worn by kids in all grades. And, yes, plenty of people do get gear when they have visited a school they actually like.
Things change when active applications are out there.
My kid is a senior, still wearing college shirts/sweatshirts and so are their friends. Heck, they wore the heck out of the Pitt free tee and never even applied.
I'm the one whose kid put all his clothes in the closet. I guess different kids handle stress differently. Also, super weird to wear a shirt you have zero connection (even mild interest) in.
Not in the least. At least for people who don't take this so dang seriously.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We bought a tee and hid it away. If he doesn't get in, we'll throw it out. No big deal.
I should say he'd never wear it to school anyway. Not the kind of kid who likes to draw attention to himself.
Nobody will pay attention to his U of SC shirt.
Yeah, definitely where my 4.94 GPA, 36 ACT kid will be going...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I feel like I'm in an alternative universe. College t-shirts and sweatshirts are extremely common where my DC goes to HS. They are worn by kids in all grades. And, yes, plenty of people do get gear when they have visited a school they actually like.
Same here. I don't understand this thread at all. My DC has bought clothes from some of the schools she has visited and it is not a reflection on which school she hopes to get into. Kids wear all kinds of college gear to school.
Anonymous wrote:I bought a T-shirt to the first choice school. He doesn't know but it will be fun to give it to him if he is accepted. I'll return it if he doesn't get in.