- May 4, 2013
- 18,966
- 20,406
Amen.Hair down there is preferred..
Yea I said it..
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Amen.Hair down there is preferred..
Yea I said it..
Hair down there is preferred..
Yea I said it..
I cringe when I hear dudes say thatHappy Wife, Happy life is some BS because it seems as if this always revolves around no happiness for the husband![]()

It's interesting society has encouraged all of us to be supportive of women's rights and equality (as we should), but there's still lots of antiquated/traditional sentiments we still adhere to when it comes to relationship dynamics. Such as this "Happy wife, happy life" saying.
I've heard from many many sources, it's better to just let the woman "win" or be "happy" in compromise of your (male) own. That doesn't sit well with me, but it seems like that's the only option.
Chaoticians*To be a places where tens of thousands are spent per person on shoes, NT is really a place of poor mathematicians.
Calling women average by saying they are 6s and 7s always makes me laugh.
I'm glad this young lady is furthering her education and maybe I'm a hater but I never understand articles or social media posts like this.
"Local kid gets into 70 universities"
"Student gets $3 million in scholarships from 40 different schools"
What is the point of applying to many universities?
You identify a couple of safety schools, some target schools and a handful of best case scenario/reach schools and you apply to those. At most, there are *maybe* 15 schools you're actually considering attending.
15 schools where you tell yourself "If I get in and the money is right, I would actually attend this university"
What's the point in applying to the other 35? From there you weigh programs, finances, scholarship money, etc and keep it moving.
Is it just the validation of knowing you can get into a lot of schools?
It just seems wasteful, even if you're getting free waivers from a lot of these schools it just seems like a waste of time applying. Not to mention by applying to schools you know you're not going to, you're just making the wait list longer and harder to get off of for other students who actually want to go to those schools.
I'm glad this young lady is furthering her education and maybe I'm a hater but I never understand articles or social media posts like this.
"Local kid gets into 70 universities"
"Student gets $3 million in scholarships from 40 different schools"
What is the point of applying to many universities?
You identify a couple of safety schools, some target schools and a handful of best case scenario/reach schools and you apply to those. At most, there are *maybe* 15 schools you're actually considering attending.
15 schools where you tell yourself "If I get in and the money is right, I would actually attend this university"
What's the point in applying to the other 35? From there you weigh programs, finances, scholarship money, etc and keep it moving.
Is it just the validation of knowing you can get into a lot of schools?
It just seems wasteful, even if you're getting free waivers from a lot of these schools it just seems like a waste of time applying. Not to mention by applying to schools you know you're not going to, you're just making the wait list longer and harder to get off of for other students who actually want to go to those schools.
What a waste of time and effort. Props to her for advancing her education, but she's just a small fish in a pond filled with people more far less talented than her. What a useless way to flex your intellectual horsepower to people who don't know any better.
She goes somewhere where the competition is more on-level, she humbles up real quick. BTW, she only got accepted into 1 "respectable and competitive" school, which is Howard. I'd even put Penn State (depending what circles you're around).
I'm glad this young lady is furthering her education and maybe I'm a hater but I never understand articles or social media posts like this.
"Local kid gets into 70 universities"
"Student gets $3 million in scholarships from 40 different schools"
What is the point of applying to many universities?
You identify a couple of safety schools, some target schools and a handful of best case scenario/reach schools and you apply to those. At most, there are *maybe* 15 schools you're actually considering attending.
15 schools where you tell yourself "If I get in and the money is right, I would actually attend this university"
What's the point in applying to the other 35? From there you weigh programs, finances, scholarship money, etc and keep it moving.
Is it just the validation of knowing you can get into a lot of schools?
It just seems wasteful, even if you're getting free waivers from a lot of these schools it just seems like a waste of time applying. Not to mention by applying to schools you know you're not going to, you're just making the wait list longer and harder to get off of for other students who actually want to go to those schools.
I was fortunate and got into a couple of top 15 MBA programs. I could have easily kept applying to schools 16-100 just kept racking up acceptances... but what's the point? Filling out applications and writing dozens of essays over and over is just a waste of time, especially for schools I know I'm not actually going to attend
Alright you doing too much now when you're sifting through "good schools".
I don't want to hate on this girl but I was thinking the same thing as you. Maybe 5 out of the school's listed would be considered "good schools" (Oregon, Howard, Penn State, Spelman, and maybe one or two others).
After that it seems like she's just padding her acceptance numbers mediocre schools she has no intentions on going to and commuter schools. What's the point?! Once you've got into one school you like and the money is right, what's the point in continuing to apply? Especially when you're applying to schools that are worse than the schools you've gotten into?
Based on grades, test scores and extracurriculars students can gain a pretty accurate picture of the schools they're likely to get into, it just seems wasteful to continue applying just for the sake of applying.
I'm super impressed when I see stuff like this:
I'm sure this kid could have applied to a hundred other schools and gotten a hundred acceptances and millions of dollars in scholarship money but what's the point when you know you're only going to a handful of these schools?
What a waste of time and effort. Props to her for advancing her education, but she's just a small fish in a pond filled with people more far less talented than her. What a useless way to flex your intellectual horsepower to people who don't know any better.
She goes somewhere where the competition is more on-level, she humbles up real quick. BTW, she only got accepted into 1 "respectable and competitive" school, which is Howard. I'd even put Penn State (depending what circles you're around).

I'm glad this young lady is furthering her education and maybe I'm a hater but I never understand articles or social media posts like this.
"Local kid gets into 70 universities"
"Student gets $3 million in scholarships from 40 different schools"
What is the point of applying to many universities?
You identify a couple of safety schools, some target schools and a handful of best case scenario/reach schools and you apply to those. At most, there are *maybe* 15 schools you're actually considering attending.
15 schools where you tell yourself "If I get in and the money is right, I would actually attend this university"
What's the point in applying to the other 35? From there you weigh programs, finances, scholarship money, etc and keep it moving.
Is it just the validation of knowing you can get into a lot of schools?
It just seems wasteful, even if you're getting free waivers from a lot of these schools it just seems like a waste of time applying. Not to mention by applying to schools you know you're not going to, you're just making the wait list longer and harder to get off of for other students who actually want to go to those schools.
I was fortunate and got into a couple of top 15 MBA programs. I could have easily kept applying to schools 16-100 just kept racking up acceptances... but what's the point? Filling out applications and writing dozens of essays over and over is just a waste of time, especially for schools I know I'm not actually going to attend
I hate Crocs. I always have always will.