Ivy Week • Day 5 • RISD + Dual Degree
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Ivy Week • Day 5 • RISD + Dual Degree
Ivy Week • Day 4 • Dartmouth
Given the events of tomorrow is it appropriate for me to cry myself to sleep tonight
I just want to go to a good college and learn everything and make my life meaningful is that too much to ask
This time tomorrow I will be crying because I didn't get accepted to any of my top colleges I can't wait
Ivy Week • Day 2 • Brown
Anyone who knew Aaron also knew just how different he was from his classmates. He didn't care much for social events nor did he fancy spending his free time getting high or whatever they did. Not to say that he hadn't done things, -- of course he had --, but he just didn't share the same interests as they did. He preferred his art and while he did spend some of his time with other people, especially with girls when he needed them for his art, he enjoyed the solitude that came he was either painting, photographing or whatever kind of method the artwork he was currently working on required.
Right now, though, he was just as nervous as every senior who waited to hear the results from all universities they had applied. Aaron had applied to three universities; Brown, Dartmouth and Rhode Island School of Design. On top of that, he had also applied for the Dual Degree program between Brown and RISD, which was his top choice. He knew that the competition for the spot in the program would be extremely tough, especially since it was difficult enough to either one of the universities, although getting to RISD was slightly easier. Nevertheless, he was nervous to receive a letter from those schools. He needed to be accepted to both in order to enroll to the program which didn't make controlling his nervousness any easier.
There's plenty of upside to being the spawn of the fabulously wealthy, but the downside, super successful parents expect nothing less from their offspring and when it comes to college that means the Ivy's. It's more than just getting into college, it's setting a course for the rest of your life and for those few who aren't legacies, the pressures are no less. When parents have sacrificed for their children's future, what kid would want to let them down?