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by morgante
4439 days ago
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> Get the best of both worlds and do a master's at a top notch school. Glad that worked out for you. To be clear, my school is actually extraordinarily good academically (we're privately funded by an oil fortune)—it's just that the prestige of the name and student's isn't quite at Ivy quality. > Point being, everywhere you are has something to offer. Make the most of your situation! I'm doing my best, and doing pretty well (making 6 figures as a college sophomore), so my regrets are more social/intellectual than monetary. Though sometimes I wonder if YC would have accepted me if I had advertised my Ivy League stamps of approval (acceptance letters)... Maybe I'll go to Harvard when I get tired of developing and decide to "pivot" into management/finance. |
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Be glad you didn't. I don't think it would have sent a positive sign. Frankly, no one wants to hear about the things you didn't do, and things like acceptance letters and SAT scores don't matter going forward.
Life is going to be filled with tough calls. Sometimes, you may have 5 promising but exclusive options to choose from. You can't make the most of the path you've taken while wasting mental energy on the ones you didn't. Take it from someone who wasted a lot of mental energy on such things before learning not to.
You said elsewhere you go to NYU -- what's stopping you from maximizing your social and intellectual opportunities?