There's a moment near the end of senior year where Greek life stops being a backdrop and starts being the whole point. You've spent four years complaining about dues, skipping chapter meetings, and swearing you'd transfer to a school with better weather. And then suddenly you're crying in a circle of guys you've known since you were eighteen years old, wearing a shirt that doesn't fit anymore, and wondering how it went this fast. Senior sendoff traditions are the thing nobody warns you about. They hit completely different than you expect.
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There's a new push at some California schools to require trained student monitors at Greek events - people who are sober, certified, and accountable for what happens during chapter functions. According to EdSource, these regulations are part of a broader effort to build safety into Greek life from the inside out, using students themselves as the enforcement mechanism rather than relying entirely on university administrators or chapter advisors hovering from a distance. On paper, it sounds reasonable. In practice, I have some thoughts.
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There's a woman named Trisha Addicks who has apparently made a very good living telling sorority hopefuls exactly how to present themselves during recruitment. The Times recently ran a piece on her, calling her America's most sought-after sorority rush coach. She advises PNMs on what to wear, what to say, how to carry themselves, how to seem like exactly the kind of person a chapter wants to invite in. And from a pure business standpoint? Good for her. She found a market and she's working it. But from where I'm standing - as someone who went through IFC recruitment and came out the other side actually believing in what Greek life can be - this whole industry makes me uncomfortable in a way I can't fully shake.
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If you've spent any time on Greek life TikTok or scrolled through the recruitment content on Instagram, you've seen the aesthetic. Matching linen sets. Choreographed bid day videos. Chapters that look like they were styled by a production crew. And it all looks incredible. The problem is that none of it has anything to do with what Greek life actually is, and I think it's starting to cause real damage to chapters that are trying to do this the right way.
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Another week, another hazing accusation at a major university. This time it's the University of Arizona in the spotlight, with yet another fraternity facing allegations of hazing - the word "yet another" doing a lot of heavy lifting in that KOLD news headline. And I don't think that phrasing was an accident. When a local news station is so used to covering these stories that they lead with "yet another," that tells you something real about where things stand.
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When guys start looking into Greek life, they usually stumble into the same confusion. There's the fraternities on the main row, the ones with the big houses and the formal recruitment, and then there's everything else. The "everything else" is where it gets interesting - and where most people have no idea what they're actually looking at.
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There's a version of sorority life that gets shown to the world - the matching recruitment outfits, the philanthropy totals, the GPA announcements. And then there's the version that lives inside chapter walls, the one that Stanford women are apparently starting to talk about out loud. A recent piece in The Stanford Daily pulled back the curtain on what sorority membership actually looks like at one of the most selective universities in the country, and honestly, it's not that surprising - but it still needs to be said.
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Here's the thing about Greek life that nobody puts in the brochure: you are going to get pulled into drama that has absolutely nothing to do with you. Doesn't matter if you're IFC, doesn't matter if you've got your own chapter business to worry about. The moment you start dating someone in a sorority, or your little sister pledges one, or your roommate is going through a chapter crisis - you're in it. Welcome.
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