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| Cover photo of Frank Bruni’s Book |
My son has worked hard and done well academically and socially during his four years of high school. However, I still have a lot of the questions that many parents have as their children start the college application process. I sometimes wonder about the importance of Tim getting into a “prestigious university.” Fortunately, I was tipped off by someone about Fran Bruni’s great book Where You Go Is Not Who You’ll Be: An Antidote to the College Admissions Mania. “Life is defined by little snags and big setbacks; success is determined by the ability to distinguish between the two and rebound from either. And there’s no single juncture, no one crossroads, on which everything hinges.”
“…if you’re a parent who’s pushing your kids relentlessly and narrowly toward one of the most prized schools in the country and you think that you’re doing them a favor, you’re not. You’re in all probability setting them up for heartbreak…”
“You’re going to get into a college that’s more than able to provide a superb education to anyone who insists on one and who takes firm charge of his or her time there.”
“It’s not where you went to school. It’s how hard you work.”
Dear Matt,On the night before you receive your first college response, we wanted to let you know that we could not be any prouder of you than we are today. Whether or not you get accepted does not determine how proud we are of everything you have accomplished and the wonderful person you have become. That will not change based on what admissions officers decide about your future. We will celebrate with joy wherever you get accepted—and the happier you are with those responses, the happier we will be. But your worth as a person, a student and our son is not diminished or influenced in the least by what these colleges have decided.
If it does not go your way, you’ll take a different route to get where you want. There is not a single college in this country that would not be lucky to have you, and you are capable of succeeding at any of them.
We love you as deep as the ocean, as high as the sky, all the way around the world and back again—and to
wherever you are headed.Mom and Dad
I can truly say that I am proud of what my son has accomplished to date and I have enjoyed watching him mature during his high school years. I am confident that he will be successful in whatever he chooses to do and I know that college application/acceptance process will not change my feelings on this.
