<p>TomerHd, just to expand a little bit and respond to your prior message:</p>
<p>It’s not that I don’t think you’re a highly capable individual with lots of potential. It’s not even that I think you don’t deserve to go to a top 10 school.</p>
<p>It’s just that, in saying you want to go to Stanford/Wharton, you are being unreasonable to your own detriment. You can become just as successful, if not MORE successful, by realizing your situation, ACKNOWLEDGING it, and then creating a plan to overcome it.</p>
<p>Don’t misinterprete MeIsHM and my advice as “discouraging.” Rather, we being optimistic and encouraging, but realistic. The fact that you are trying to apply to top 10 schools demostrates you are not showing enough foresight. No one is going to prevent you from applying to a top school, but just make sure you don’t leave out the other options – I guess what we’re trying to say is: you don’t have to go to a top school to be successful (undergraduate has very little, if any impact, on your success in life. MBA/Graduate school is 1000x more important, so keep your eye out on the long-term.)</p>