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Attention all aspirants (especially NPHC)
This is what you DO NOT DO if you are rejected:
YOU DO NOT WRITE AN EDITORIAL IN THE CAMPUS NEWSPAPER!!!!! Elle Greenberry of Arkansas State University writes: You would think that with all the experience, knowledge and sacrifice one's parent has done for the action or cause of the sorority that I'd be a shoe -in. One would think good grades, a record of community services stretching back into elementary school would make me one of the more obvious of candidates to be rushed. Apparently, my destiny to be an AKA is not without challenges such as those Jason and his Argonauts faced. Just as the gods and Medea helped him, only time and divine intervention will lead the way to my sorority fate. I attended all the meetings and informational gatherings. I was given inaccurate information regarding the submission of necessary materials. This misinformation led to my not getting a nomination and becoming a legacy in my sorority of choice. Click the link above for more tripe. |
On top of sounding bitter and whiny, she's a pretty terrible writer. Here are a few gems that made me go "Whaaa..?"
"The colors of AKA, pink and green, have been in my wardrobe in some faction of silhouette, design, custom made dress or from off the rack for as long as I can remember." "You would think that with all the experience, knowledge and sacrifice one's parent has done for the action or cause of the sorority that I'd be a shoe -in." "There were words of encouragement from my brother. His criticism of the Greeks, meant as comfort went along the lines that he was "glad I'd not be joining the cult and that my day to be a snob would have to wait." He actually has harsher things to say about all Greek organizations not only on this campus but those of national prominence citing class, privilege and snobbery. He is nicest to this one due to the number of women who belong to it from our family." "I'm finding that perhaps some lines that are drawn to keep someone out include the same line I'm trying to cross." "Is it all about turning papers in on a date despite the date being vague- dates that forced an individual get everything needed done now or never- one time only?" "So are sororities a social class privilege designed only for those deemed the fairest of them all bent on being better than this sorority or that one? Is it as pervasive as Spike Lee points out in his cult classic film, School Daze 1988, where we all need to wake up from the delusion that it is not?" "I mean, would other legacies' or founding members' children face this type of hardship?" (Yes, they would. They do.) |
wow
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I just don't know what to say.
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I see why she wasn't a 'shoe in'. I'm glad that her mother being a 'a founding member of Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority undergraduate chapter and also a founding member of the graduate chapter of Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority in Blytheville' didn't help her. They dodged a bullet.
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Her quote: "I believe that the conflicts and problems in life are not what define us - what matters is how we respond to them." Exactly.
And she didn't respond to her rejection very well at all. And her writing style is brutal. :eek: I can tell this article was emotionally charged and written in haste. She is trying to 'get back at' my sorority for not accepting her by, if you will, 'putting them on blast'. All she's done is dig a deeper hole for herself. Thank God she didn't post her picture up, too. ~tsk, tsk~ :rolleyes: |
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Uh-oh. *cringe* This is the type of "article" about which my dad said "write it and stick it in a drawer and look at it in a week." Then, after a week, I'd look at it, rewrite it, and stick it back in the drawer. After about a month, it just didn't matter and I'd moved on.
Very few people can write well after experiencing rejection. What is written just doesn't come across as anything other than sour grapes, all too frequently. And, in my experience, the feelings seldom (if ever fit) the facts of the situation. Unfortunately, this is Out In Public now and may have future repercussions for this young woman that she hasn't even considered. Some may be positive, others negative; who can say? Her disappointment is palpable underneath all those cliches. For that, I'm sorry; it's a hard life lesson. Would that we were all spared from the heartaches, hard knocks, and blows of life; but then, what would our characters be? |
Sounds like she would have been a lousy member, since all she seems to do is highlight the accolades of her family members. I don't see any of her own accomplishments mentioned. I could see her saying, "I don't need to be at that early service event. I mean, my MOM has served enough for the both of us!"
When I saw the part about her mother being a founder of the chapter, I yelled out loud. I'm a chapter founder, and if my daughter EVER carried herself with this sense of entitlement, there would be a chancla flying across the room! |
I don't know what a chancla is, but I'd pay good money to see that. LOL
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I can see why she was rejected. Her mother's accomplishments are hers alone. Maybe she should stop trying to ride her mother like Sea Biscuit into the organization and try getting in on her own merit. Legacies with a sense of entitlement...shidddd! I can't honor that BS. She deserves to get played for being so desperate.
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HA!!!!! I love it and will incorporate it into my vocab.
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Ooooh, she is tacky and stoopid!
I Googled her and found some other trifling articles she had written. |
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