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Originally Posted by KSUViolet06
Ok. so this is apparently a common sentiment in the South.
At what point does a mom let go though? I mean, at what point does mom say "this is not my life, it's hers and she can do what she pleases?"
Do Southern moms whose kids don't join "top tier" chapters spend their whole lives dwelling on it and being embarrassed?
These are serious questions. I've only even lived in California and Ohio, so I'm reasonably clueless about this sort of mother/daughter dynamic when it comes to sorority life. I've heard of moms being upset when maybe daughter doesn't get into Harvard, but even they get over it--and I just don't see sorority life as important enough to dwell on like this.
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It is not a common sentiment in the south. In the south, the reputations of college chapters may play big in hometowns, but it's not normal or common for mothers to want daughters to drop chapters that the daughters are apparently happy in.
I think it's common or normal for mom's to feel disappointed when their daughters don't end up in the chapters that they want, but not to do what this mom is doing in terms of debating whether to encourage her daughter to drop before initiation.
It would be far more common for everyone to appreciate that mother and daughter might be disappointed, but to admire them more for supporting the chapter who actually wanted to offer membership to the girl.
Seriously, I've never seen a case in real life in which a mom remained ashamed of her daughter's chapter months after bid day.