logo
Helping Your Daughter if Sorority Recruitment Doesn't Work Out for Her

Helping Your Daughter if Sorority Recruitment Doesn't Work Out for Her

Yahooa day ago
There is a saying when your daughter decides to go through sorority recruitment, 'Trust the Process.' It is said repeatedly throughout the rush preparation period. It basically means, keep moving forward and in the end, you will find your sisters, and the sorority that is meant for you. I never asked, 'What happens to the girls who don't get a bid?'
Rush at many schools can be very daunting and full of emotion. It is not a 'sign here' process. It is a selection process where not all young women get selected for the sorority that they want to belong to or, in some cases, any sorority at all. The term is 'dropped.' And it is a very painful, embarrassing part of rush that no one talks about.
I am not going to debate the fairness or exclusivity of the process of rushing because there are people more qualified than I am to address that topic. This is solely about how to support your daughter when she is dropped during rush.
What parents can do when their daughter is dropped during rush
When a young woman is dropped during rush, she gets a call from her trusted advisor for the process. This trained upperclassman or possibly named 'Gamma Chi' gently shares the difficult news. She cannot give your daughter any reason why she has been dropped by all of the sororities. All your daughter knows is that her journey towards sisterhood is now over. When that call ends, she is often left alone with little to no support system on campus.
As moms, is it our job to make sure our daughters know that they are smart, worthwhile young women who our valuable members of their college campus despite not being accepted by the Greek system.
Sadly, this happened to my daughter. My heart broke immediately as I read a 5:30am text, 'I have been dropped.' It felt like the rejection of thousands of girls on a new college campus that she had only been on for 3 days.
Of course that isn't how the process works exactly but it didn't matter one bit. It is how she felt. My daughter was in a brand-new place with no real friends. I was at home helpless. I wanted to call every sorority house and yell at them that they missed out on a loyal, kind, great person. You might feel that way too. And that's natural because I don't care if your girl is 10, 18 or 28, when someone hurts your child, they hurt you too. However, the truth is, there is no one to call for answers. That is part of the difficultly in this situation. You will never know 'why.'
I got swept up in the excitement of sorority rush
I wish I had a 'what if you are dropped' discussion before I had left my daughter at college. I was so confident in the high percent of bids given out each year that I never thought my daughter would be one of the few hundred who wouldn't get one. I read the Facebook parent page posts with so much excitement that even pre-ordered a Bid Day Box. I admit that I got swept up in the excitement.
A mom I meet online told that she had learned from her experience with her older daughter-be ready for anything during rush. Her older daughter had been dropped and was devastated. She almost left college because of it.
This time around the mom was prepared. She had all the freshman week activities printed out with contacts for each. She had a discussion with her daughter beforehand so her daughter knew that if she were dropped, she would immediately pivot to freshman-week activities. Her daughter also knew that being dropped was a possibility. That mom did not pre-order a Bid Day Box.
Talk to your daughter beforehand about the possibility of being dropped
After going through this experience, I recommend having a discussion with your daughter about rushing and the possibility of being dropped. If it does happen, first let your daughter cry. Know that she will feel that she is the only young women that has been dropped, even though there were many.
The girls who are dropped usually feel ashamed and embarrassed. Again, those percentage numbers made them feel like they did something wrong to not get a bid. Remind your daughter she did nothing wrong.
Tell her that you are going to be with her every step of the way to support her moving forward. Remind her that her value was never wrapped up in an envelope on bid day. Acknowledge that this may hurt for a while but explain that she needs to get out of her dorm. Not every girl on campus is rushing even though it might feel way.
Help your daughter identify other interests
What are your daughter's other interests? Look on the campus website and find clubs that matches that her interests. Is there a girl on her floor or in the dorm who she can ask to have lunch or dinner with who is not rushing? Is there an RA she can ask about campus activities?
Try to put a plan in place with her for the next few hours. It might be very early when she first calls. Often the first call comes at 5am. Maybe you can watch a Netflix show together for a while or she can go back to sleep for a few hours. But do not let her stay in her dorm alone for too long. If she needs help figuring out what to say to her roommate, encourage her to be honest. She is going to be living with this young woman for next several months. It is better to not lie. My daughter told her roommate and it was nice for her to have a trusted friend in this process.
There's no shame in helping your daughter through this disappointment
One mom told me that she called the student union freshman coordinator and found out that there was a campus small group coordinator that got her daughter involved immediately in freshman activities. Many articles advise parents to let their new college freshman to do everything on their own. But that day this mom knew her daughter needed help.
There is no shame in being the mom that your child needs on day 3 of college. This was a true mental health issue. Her daughter got a very inviting call to join a group of students doing a 'walk your schedule' tour. For the next several days her daughter had scheduled activities that kept her busy. Yes, she was still sad. But she was getting to know her way around campus, making friends, learning about the non-Greek activities on campus and little by little finding some healing.
Another mom I spoke with said she helped her daughter look up church-based groups on campus. She gave her the courage to reach out on her own to the President of one via social media. The President responded to her immediately and invited her to meet for lunch where she learned about their group as well as other ways help the local community. Getting involved in other activities helped her forget about sorority rush.
The weeks after her daughter was dropped were difficult for both mom and daughter
I admit the next few weeks were difficult for both of us. I texted and called my daughter often. She had a hard time seeing the friends group forming among the girls in pledge classes and feeling left out. She went to several activities by herself and started to meet a few girls who did not rush. I was so proud of her for putting herself out there.
It is too early to tell if my daughter will every truly feel like she belongs on this campus after her experience. I have read that some girls transfer soon after, some rush again, and others find friendships outside of Greek life. The other day she told me if she knew she would have not had positive rush experience, she would have chosen another university. I felt guilty that I allowed her to rush. I am sure I wouldn't feel that way if everything had worked out perfectly, but it didn't. And it doesn't for hundreds of girls on campuses all over the country.
A message to other moms in my shoes
To all the moms whose daughters called them crying or who will call them crying because they are dropped during rush, I want you to know, you are not alone. Your daughter is perfectly lovely. She deserved better. I am sorry that it didn't work out the way you both envisioned. I know that it hurts a lot right now. That pain isn't silly or trite. Now it is time to pivot to plan B.
Help your daughter find her new path. And when you hang up with her, know it is okay to cry that people have hurt her. I did. But when she calls, make sure you dry those tears because she needs you to show strength in moving forward, just like she always has because you are her mom..now and always.
P.S. Remember when we were worried about picking out a brand of diaper and thought that was the hardest decision? I sure miss those days.
The author of this post wishes to remain anonymous.
More Great Reading:
This Sorority Girl Was Okay With Her Daughter Not Rushing
The post Helping Your Daughter if Sorority Recruitment Doesn't Work Out for Her appeared first on Grown and Flown.
Solve the daily Crossword
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Man Refuses to Attend Girlfriend's Family Dinners After 2 Years of Being Treated 'Like Background Noise'
Man Refuses to Attend Girlfriend's Family Dinners After 2 Years of Being Treated 'Like Background Noise'

Yahoo

time28 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Man Refuses to Attend Girlfriend's Family Dinners After 2 Years of Being Treated 'Like Background Noise'

He says her relatives treat him like a stranger, and the internet is siding with him NEED TO KNOW A man says his girlfriend's family treats him like 'background noise' after two years together He's decided to stop attending their dinners, telling her he feels invisible Reddit users say the real problem is her lack of support, calling it a red flag A man turns to the Reddit community for support following an emotional standoff with his girlfriend over her family's cold treatment toward him. He says they have been together for a little over two years, but the lack of connection with her family has left him feeling invisible. 'From the start they've treated me like background noise,' he shares. 'Polite but distant like I'm a stranger passing through.' He explains that in more than a dozen dinners together, he has tried to be polite, helpful and engaging, but the warmth never comes. He says he always makes an effort, bringing wine, complimenting the food and offering to help clean up. 'They smile and nod then go right back to talking to her like I'm not there,' he writes. The conversations, he says, are exclusively directed toward his girlfriend, asking her about her work, hobbies and family memories while he sits on the sidelines. 'I'll try to jump in and ask a question or make a comment and I get a short answer then silence,' he explains. 'It's like they don't even see me.' The most startling moment came when her father didn't seem to remember him. 'Once her dad asked if I was still the same guy from last time,' he recalls. 'We'd been together a year and a half by then.' He says he smiled and sat through the moment, feeling both shocked and hurt. Last week, his girlfriend invited him to another family dinner. That's when he says he decided he couldn't keep doing it. 'I told her I didn't want to go,' he explains. 'She asked why and I finally told her I feel invisible around them.' He says he was honest about how exhausted he felt from pretending their coldness was normal. 'I'm tired of pretending their coldness is normal,' he writes. 'She said her family is just slow to warm up and that they're private not mean.' But after more than two years, he says that that explanation no longer makes sense to him. 'I'm not asking for hugs or to be called son in law,' he says. 'I just want to feel like they actually see me.' His girlfriend responded by telling him that skipping dinners would make it even harder for her to bring their lives together. 'She says I'm making it harder to bring her life and mine together,' he explains. 'That if I stop showing up they'll never know me.' But from his perspective, he has been making the effort all along. 'I feel like I've been trying this whole time and they've never tried back,' he says. In the end, he turned to Reddit to ask the central question weighing on him: 'AITA for deciding I'm done showing up for people who never see me?' The post drew strong reactions from readers. One commenter pointed the finger not at the family, but at the girlfriend. 'Your girlfriend is the problem here,' the commenter writes. 'She is the one that should be standing up for you, involving you in the conversation, calling them out for being cold.' That reader went even further, suggesting that her inaction might signal something deeper about their relationship. 'She's ok with you being treated like trash,' the commenter adds. 'I'm guessing if you REALLY sat down and thought about it, she does the same with her friends and coworkers when you're around them.' They suggest that the girlfriend's lack of defense could mean she's more in love with the image of having a boyfriend than with him as a person. 'She likes the IDEA of you,' they write, 'but you're not enough for her to fight for.' Never miss a story — sign up for to stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. As he weighs his next steps, the question isn't just about skipping dinner. It's about whether a relationship can thrive when one partner's family refuses to acknowledge the other — and whether the partner in the middle is willing to bridge that gap. For now, his words remain as much a statement as a question: 'I'm done showing up for people who never see me. Read the original article on People Solve the daily Crossword

What schools in LCISD received A's, F's from TEA's accountability report? Here's what to know
What schools in LCISD received A's, F's from TEA's accountability report? Here's what to know

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

What schools in LCISD received A's, F's from TEA's accountability report? Here's what to know

After years of waiting, the Texas Education Agency released the long-awaited 2024-25 accountability scores for schools and districts across the state. That means the public can examine how each of the schools within the Lubbock-Cooper Independent School District performs and compare them to one another. Others are reading: Are Lubbock area school districts earning A's or F's? TEA releases 2024, 2025 school ratings With six schools getting straight A's, another failing and the rest getting B's or C's, here's a look at how each school within LCISD did. What is the TEA accountability rating? The new TEA A-F ratings factor in many aspects that boil down to three big "domains" that help hold the school accountable while providing transparency to parents. 70% of the score comes from the highest score of the following: Student Achievement: What students know and can do. (I.e., STAAR scores, graduation rates and college/career readiness.) School Process: How far students have come or how campuses have done compared to similar comparison groups. This score comes from the higher Academic Growth or Relative Performance scores. The other 30% comes from Closing the Gap, or how different student groups are performing. Straight A schools in Lubbock-Cooper ISD Six received an overall score of A from the TEA. Here's a breakdown of the school's and their domain scores. Lubbock-Cooper High School — 93/100 Student Achievement: A (92/100). School Progress: B (86/100). Closing the Gap: A (95/100). Lubbock-Cooper Liberty High School — 92/100 Student Achievement: A (92/100). School Progress: B (82/100). Closing the Gap: A (91/100). Lubbock-Cooper New Hope Academy — 91/100 Student Achievement: B (88/100). School Progress: A (91/100). Closing the Gap: Not Rated. West Elementary — 92/100 Student Achievement: A (92/100). School Progress: B (88/100). Closing the Gap: A (91/100). North Elementary — 91/100 Student Achievement: A (90/100). School Progress: B (87/100). Closing the Gap: A (92/100). Central Elementary — 90/100 Student Achievement: A (91/100). School Progress: A (91/100). Closing the Gap: B (89/100). Failing schools in Lubbock-Cooper ISD No schools within Lubbock-Cooper ISD received a score of D or lower from the TEA. Room for improvement in schools at Lubbock-Cooper ISD Here's a look at the schools within FISD that received an overall B rating from TEA: Lubbock-Cooper Middle School — B (84/100). Laura Bush Middle School — B (85/100). Here's a look at the one school within LCISD that received an overall C rating from TEA and its domain scores: South Elementary — C (78/100). Student Achievement: C (79/100). School Progress: C (79/100). Closing the Gap: C (75/100). East Elementary — C (77/100). Student Achievement: C (72/100). School Progress: C (78/100). Closing the Gap: C (75/100). For a deeper dive into each campus' scores or to see how other schools did, visit Mateo Rosiles is the Government & Public Policy reporter for the Lubbock Avalanche-Journal. Got a news tip for him? Email him: mrosiles@ This article originally appeared on Lubbock Avalanche-Journal: See how schools in Lubbock-Cooper ISD did on TEA accountability rating Solve the daily Crossword

Casselberry offers free native Florida trees to residents through Adopt-a-Tree Program
Casselberry offers free native Florida trees to residents through Adopt-a-Tree Program

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Casselberry offers free native Florida trees to residents through Adopt-a-Tree Program

The City of Casselberry is providing free native trees from Florida to residents through its Adopt-a-Tree Program, with applications accepted until August 31, 2025. This initiative intends to offer shade, beauty, and environmental advantages to residential properties within Casselberry's city limits. The program encourages residents to enhance their yards by planting native trees, thereby increasing the city's green canopy and promoting ecological health. Residents interested in participating in the Adopt-a-Tree Program can apply online HERE. Click here to download our free news, weather and smart TV apps. And click here to stream Channel 9 Eyewitness News live. Solve the daily Crossword

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store