<p>^Aww, I’m sorry, Jain =(</p>
<p>^Heyy Dun be man … I told you this is what I expected already !! … and yeah my consolations are with you too … !! and all others , Well this is one the my last posts on CC … Again thank you guys For being there !!! I truly appreciate everyone of your good spirits !!</p>
<p>Rejected! Oh well, still waiting on Ivies. And anyway, UChicago <3</p>
<p>Rejected. Waiting for the other colleges to release their decisions by the end of this month.</p>
<p>Hey,
I was just talking about MIT admissions with my friend at school, and thought I should just swing by.
Even if you did get rejected, at least you now know. I sit here wondering, “could I have made it?”. I didn’t apply and now I will never know if I could make it in.
Good luck in life. I was rejected from Uchicago, but I never really got over it. I found a smaller college that just offered me almost a full ride, and I realized I will end up at a medical professional wherever I go, because it will depend on myself rather than the institution.</p>
<p>Hey, how are you wait-listed applicants handling the decision? I was honestly thinking I had a pretty good chance (I know, very arrogant) so it was sort of a shock. But hey, better than rejection.</p>
<p>I’m already into UChicago, which I love, so it shouldn’t be that big of a deal, but not getting into MIT first round somehow makes any possible acceptance less valuable. Sort of like “Hey, we liked you a lot, but you weren’t good enough for the main pool, so we’ll just wait list you. Or but wait, we’ll admit you later because some people will choose not to go to MIT.” It just doesn’t seem as great an accomplishment. I know how this must sound, especially to those who were rejected, but is anyone going through the same though process?</p>
<p>I’m trying to trust the committee’s decision, I really am. Thoughts?</p>
<p>^Thoughts ?? … You are lucky enough … you are better than the majority … You have a bright chance in making to MIT … Be cool & be proud … you are still among the smartest people in the world !!!</p>
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<p>If you get in, don’t second guess it. MIT is not a monolith anyway; the great dome itself doesn’t read the applications. It’s a messy, crude, and subjective process; results could vary depending on who within the admissions office reads it, especially if you were close enough to be waitlisted. Admissions is hard these days; don’t make it harder.</p>