Quote:
Originally posted by GPhiBLtColonel
...I don't think anyone who pictures herself as "the typical sorority girl" will post here and say, why yes I AM the typical sorority girl
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Well, then I'll go out on a limb and say I think I was a somewhat typical sorority girl
I wasn't "typical" because I wasn't a size 6, blonde or rich. My family didn't have a rich tradition of GLO membership until my generation (at Christmases with my dad's family, we girl cousins represented AOII, Theta, Phi Mu and Pi Phi in our college days! The boys were Phi Taus or independents.)
Even so, in many ways I was a "typical" sorority girl, especially for my school back then. I was a brown-eyed brunette, very preppy, involved in extracurricular activities, went to a local private all-girl HS, and my daddy was a lawyer (not a rich lawyer, but one nonetheless.) I think I fit every part of CarolinaCutie's definition of a sorority girl! It really sums up what many people considered a sorority girl to be at my school 'back in the day.'
I always knew I wanted to be in a sorority, but the sororities I knew about didn't have chapters at my school. AOII found me, I found AOII, and the rest is history! I'm a sorority girl. I always was, I always will be, and I like it like that
Christin