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Message from the Editor

Issue date: 9/2/08 Section: News
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Joey
Joey

As I squinted at the bright screen of my laptop, my mind tried fruitlessly to control the growing sense of dread that was slowly taking over. The email that I had waited for months was sitting there in my inbox, but it wasn't titled "CONGRATULATIONS" like the other admissions notices I had already received. Instead, it simply read something like, "Your admissions result is now available online."

Everything froze for a moment. What did this mean? Thinking that HBS would follow a similar pattern to the other b-schools I applied to, I had waited and hoped for a phone call from the admissions director since last week and ominously, none had come. The writing was on the wall: I didn't get in.

I glided my frightened mouse over the email and clicked. Nothing happened. Our Internet connection at home had apparently gone down late last night. This was turning out to be one of those days.

Treating the streets of Manila like the autobahn in Germany, I raced to the office to access my email. Being painfully early in the morning, there were no cars on the road so my drive was a relaxing and calming one. It was at this time that I started to rationalize. "It'll still be fun doing an MBA in Chicago," I naively told myself.

When I got to my desk, I powered my laptop and opened my mail. One email linked followed another in an utterly cruel procession to what I had already accepted as inevitable rejection. Then, when I got to the link that promised to finally bring me to my admissions results, I accessed the page and my eyes fell on the one word I had been seeking like no other: congratulations.

Time slowed and stopped. Then everything eventually sped up again and the first words to break the silence were my own, "I can't believe I got in, I can't believe I got in!" I ran outside our office building and couldn't control the energy that was flowing through my body. I walked and paced wildly like a fish out of water. It was one of those moments that has been forever etched into my memory.

Then, I made the call to my parents and shared the good news with them. They were obviously very happy and congratulated me. It was only afterwards though that I truly realized what getting into Harvard meant to them. In a conversation I had days later, my younger sister told me that my father stayed home that whole morning sending text messages and making phone calls to all his relatives and friends. He had a big smile on his face and my sister says that she saw tears in his eyes.
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Viewing Comments 1 - 3 of 3

Paul Shafer

posted 9/02/08 @ 9:10 PM EST

Joey,

Best of luck, and every success, in your role as Editor, not to mention the 2 years that lie before you.

If you view your role as making diverse views available to your student body, so that can judge as they will, please consider printing the following story, which appeared first in 12/06 and again in 9/07 in Harbus (see url below). (Continued…)

Gaurav Sharma

posted 9/22/08 @ 11:27 PM EST

All the best Joey

Alexaner Haislip

posted 9/29/08 @ 5:19 PM EST

Paul, thanks for your perspective. I read it with great interest. It's the sort of thing that anyone who has graduated from an Ivy (at any level) can appreciate. (Continued…)

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