Hi, friend. This is part six of my college series, where I share the challenges I faced during my time at UNC. If you haven’t already, you can catch up on the earlier posts here.
I don’t remember exactly when I first learned the unspoken rules of my sorority, but by the time I was a junior at UNC, they were second nature.
The sisterhood was more than a network of friendships—it was a blueprint for the life we were supposed to want.
It wasn’t written down anywhere, of course, but we all knew it.
Graduate? Absolutely.
With honors, preferably.
But the college degree was a backup plan, a safety net.
The real goal wasn’t a career—it was a man.
A man with means, with connections, with the ability to place us in the kind of life we had been trained to aspire to.
A life where we played tennis at the club on Thursday mornings, volunteered for the Junior League, and led the student council at our children’s private schools.
But where had we learned it?
I didn't get it from my parents.
My mother had always told me I was smart, that I could do anything.
My father pushed me to be independent, to trust my mind, to chase ambition.
And yet, somewhere along the way, those lessons were rewritten—silenced and replaced by something quieter, more insidious.
I absorbed them without ever being told.
Not through words, but through the air I breathed, the smiles that earned approval, the cultural roles so deeply woven into me that they never needed to be said.
It’s in the way little girls are praised for their beauty before their brilliance, their sweetness before their strength.
In the lessons we receive wrapped in politeness—the art of being agreeable, effortless, pleasing. It’s in the etiquette classes, the debutante balls, the delicate dance of taking up space without ever truly claiming it.
It’s the silent rule that a girl should be well-educated, but never too outspoken.
She should strive but never surpass, speak but never disrupt, shine but never outshine.
It starts early.
The fairy tales where princesses wait to be chosen.
Watching our mothers host dinner parties while our fathers talked about business.
Seeing the women who were celebrated most—the ones who had done everything “right”— the ones who had secured a wealthy husband, a beautiful home, a life free from financial struggle.
And then there was the fear.
Because if you weren’t chosen, weren’t married, weren’t seen as desirable—where did that leave you?
The message was everywhere: your worth wasn’t in who you were, but in who wanted you.
We understood the assignment.
Be charming.
Be thin (but not too thin—men liked curves, but only in the right places).
Be cultured.
Be smart.
Have opinions, just not strong ones.
Be ambitious, but only in socially acceptable ways—a part-time Etsy shop, a charity board, maybe interior design if we really got restless.
Above all, be agreeable.
Be palatable.
Be wife material.
And never—ever—say any of this out loud.
That’s why the moment in the dining hall in the fall of my junior year stands out so vividly.
Rebecca wasn’t one of us—she wasn’t in our circle, wasn’t in a sorority at all.
Rebecca was loud, a little brash, and had an unfortunate habit of saying what she actually thought.
We were all gathered around a table, laughing about something trivial, when someone asked Rebecca what she wanted to do after college.
She shrugged.
“Honestly? I just want to be a trophy wife.”
Silence.
Forks scraped against plates.
Someone cleared their throat.
My sorority sisters exchanged quick, almost imperceptible glances—tiny flickers of shock and quiet judgment.
A shift, subtle but sharp, like a sudden chill in the air.
I could see it written in their expressions: Bless her heart.
She had disobeyed the cardinal rule.
Wanting it was fine—expected, even.
But admitting it? A fatal error.
A trophy wife never announces herself.
She simply is.
And perhaps the biggest unspoken truth of all—trophy wives did not come in size 10.
Rebecca had broken every rule.
One of the girls recovered first “Oh, Rebecca,” she said lightly, her voice dripping with condescension. “You’re so funny.”
We laughed uncomfortably. Grateful when the subject changed and the moment passed.
But the air remained heavy—the kind of weight you don’t acknowledge but can’t quite shake.
She had spoken a truth we weren’t supposed to say.
A truth we had all silently accepted, yes.
But hearing it out loud made it impossible to ignore.
Impossible not to feel the weight of it.
Impossible not to judge ourselves, just a little.
I knew that truth well.
I had felt it when my fraternity dates introduced me as their “arm candy” or “the total package.”
I had felt it when my roommate came back from winter break, 15 pounds lighter, and the housemother smiled, her voice warm with approval: Oh, honey, you’re going to have a line of boys waiting for you now.
If you had asked me then, I would have denied it.
I would have told you I had ambitions, plans of my own.
I wasn’t consciously trying to shape my life around a man.
I suppose some things are so deeply ingrained, so seamlessly stitched into the fabric of your world, that you don’t even realize you’re following the pattern.
This was just how life worked.
It was the natural order of things, like gravity or the changing seasons.
Of course, I wanted the nice house, the country club membership, the luxury SUV with leather seats that smelled like old money.
I wanted the curated Instagram life—the kind that signaled to the world I had made it.
But more than anything, I wanted to be chosen. I wanted to feel worthy.
What I didn’t know then—what I couldn’t have known—was the cost.
I didn’t see how chasing that version of success meant slowly erasing myself.
Silencing my voice.
Shrinking my presence.
Giving away my power.
I didn’t realize that the polished, picture-perfect version of me was a performance.
I had become an actress in my own life, so devoted to the role that I lost sight of the girl underneath.
I would learn, in time, that wealth does not equal security.
That the big house can feel like a prison.
That a husband’s success can sometimes come at the cost of a wife’s voice.
That the white Range Rover might come with a price far greater than money.
But I didn’t know any of that then.
At 21, all I knew was that I didn’t want to be Rebecca.
I wanted to belong. I needed to belong.
So I swallowed the unease, just as I had swallowed every other uncomfortable truth about what was expected of me.
And I smiled.
And I laughed.
And I played my role so well that even I believed it.
**Click here to continue reading the next post in this series.
Oh Alicia, thank you for commenting! Your words mean a lot to me. I TOTALLY relate to that mix of pride and longing—wanting to be independent but also craving that sense of belonging. And yes, it’s both comforting and heartbreaking to realize how many of us carried (and sometimes still carry) those insecurities, shaping ourselves around what we thought we should be. I hope that by sharing these stories, we realize we were not alone (no matter what the circumstance). I love that we can have these conversations now, peeling back the layers and reclaiming our worth on our own terms. I’m so grateful you’re here, and I can’t wait to share more with you! ❤️
This is an amazing and honest piece about how we all absorb things that probably don't really serve us every well. It wasn't until after my divorce that someone said out loud, "The man is not the plan." By then I had two children and had spent nine years out of the workforce. For me, all ended well eventually, but wow, I wish I had your insights when I was young. I certainly would have slowed down. I would not have believed I was washed up at 25 because I wasn't engaged. Ridiculous! Subscribed and can't wait to read more.