I lived off-campus for almost two full years before I joined a fraternity. I had my own lease, my own schedule, and a commute that made me feel like I was already a functioning adult. Then I moved into the chapter house my junior year, and honestly, I had to rethink basically everything I thought I knew about how college housing works.
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Somewhere between 2019 and now, Greek life stopped being a thing you experienced and started being a thing you performed. I don't mean that in a totally cynical way. But I graduated in 2024, and I watched it happen in real time - the slow shift where every philanthropy event, every formal, every bid day became content first and a moment second. And nobody really talked about it out loud. We just kind of adjusted and kept posting.
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There's an opinion piece circulating from Journal-News.com right now that asks a question most university administrators have been actively dodging for years: what do you actually want Greek life to be? Not what you want it to look like in a brochure. Not what you want to tell parents at orientation. What do you actually want it to be, and are you willing to say that out loud?
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There's a piece in the Los Angeles Loyolan right now where a student reflects on doing sorority rush the wrong way the first time around. She went back. She figured it out. And honestly, reading that, I felt something - because the fraternity side of this story is basically identical, and nobody talks about it enough.
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Every chapter I've ever worked with during Panhellenic recruitment has the same problem. They spend three weeks before rush drilling members on talking points - hometown, major, favorite chapter event - and then they wonder why PNMs walk out of every house feeling like they just sat through the same interview twelve times. The script kills the conversation before it starts.
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I graduated in 2023 with 47 women I called sisters and about six I actually talk to now. That number used to embarrass me a little. Like maybe I'd done something wrong, or hadn't tried hard enough to stay connected. But I've stopped feeling bad about it. Because I think six real ones - after everything - is actually a lot.
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So Alpha Zeta had a fire. Fire departments responded, the house got damaged, and now everybody's doing that thing where they shake their heads and say something vague about fraternity houses being old. And look, I get it. But I want to push back on the idea that this is just some random unfortunate event. Because it's not. It's a pattern, and Greek life keeps treating it like a surprise every single time.
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Nobody warned me about the scheduling conflict between picking a major and actually living inside a fraternity. I mean, they warned me about time management in some vague, orientation-video kind of way. But they didn't tell me that Sigma Alpha Epsilon's calendar would be so genuinely packed that I'd be choosing between a major advising appointment and philanthropy week setup - and that I'd pick the philanthropy week every single time. Twice. Until I almost picked the wrong major entirely.
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