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Your Friend Who Just Got Into A Men’s Organization Is Better Than You

By Yap Leader , in 2025 Campus Life , at September 24, 2025 Tags: ,

Last Monday, The Patriarchy — one of the least prestigious men’s organizations on campus — admitted its newest member class after a gruelingly selective three-week process. Following this announcement, your friend who just got in wants you to know: he’s better than you.

Chosen from an applicant pool with a slight 90% acceptance rate, your friend has clearly demonstrated qualities and skills that will make him vastly more successful in life than you will ever be. His application essay about finding his faith after breaking up with his high school girlfriend who he cheated on multiple times was both relatable and unique. Yours, on the other hand, about your mom dying? Way too depressing.

The humility (and deep pockets) he showed when he lost 300 dollars at meet and greet poker night impressed everyone, while you asking for a lettuce bun burger at the applicant barbecue rubbed a lot of members the wrong way.

The true nail in the coffin, though, was when asked the infamous interview question: “What’s one reason you shouldn’t join The Patriarchy?” You gave a thoughtful and self-aware answer while he said, “There are none. I’m perfect.” It also may have helped that he and all the other applicants who got in happened to be in the same FLO, Fish camp, and major as half the organization, but that is unclear.

Now he gets to use The Patriarchy to further his growth in college, while you will be stagnant and eternally irrelevant. While you develop hobbies and intimate relationships, he will be at ChiliFest “improving his communication skills” and “working on a team.” He’ll get to exemplify his humility when he wears Patriarchy merch every day, even years after he graduates, and he’ll never miss a chance to remind people of the life-changing philanthropy work the organization does that one Saturday morning each year.

In ten years, you will be building a fulfilling life, while he will get to come back for tailgates, inserting himself into conversations with nineteen-year-olds and saying with complete sincerity, “I used to run this org.”

— Yap Leader