Undergraduate /
About Footie Pajamas: Common App and Pitt Personal Statement [14]
These are just my suggestion, you don't have to take it. Good luck :)
It
is was
now a
particularly brisk September morning
.and I
am plopped
on one side of my bed
in my onesie,with a Macbook
inon my lap, staring at
this the blank page
Word document , racking my brain for something. Anything.
My little brother Ben
just bu
r sted in
my room, looking for somebody to exasperate. What else is new? Over the years
, I
have learned to get rid of him
that the best way to rid myself of him is to completely by
disregardignoring him
completely a
nd immerse myself in whatever is in front of me .
(new paragraph)
Since my college essay-writing is proving to be ineffectual, I
am nowwas scrutinizing my footie pajamas. Yes, I am a seventeen year old girl with footie pajamas. The childish fleece zoo animals gaze up at me
.their smiling visages reminding me of a simpler time asM y ears
hearkenwere expecting for Ben's fading footsteps that indicate his exit, but none are coming. Instead
, he
wasnowadjacentright next to me,
peeringperusingaround my laptop screen in
thatthe annoying manner of his.
"College Essay Draft," he read aloud in a mock nerd voice from the top of the document. I'm ignored him.My hand
is glidingmoved along the sleeve, taking in the softness and cringing when my fingers
felt the vexatious obstruction of a lint ball. I
attemptedwas tempted to pick each one off, but their numerousness
is forc
ed me to accept
that they will remain therethe way it is . It seem
ed the older I
am get
ting, the more I have to accept. I'
ve accepted that I won't always get my way, that my parents will remain this irritating forever (only because they love me, of course), that I'm allowed to be myself.
NowW hen I look
ed in
to the mirror
, I
was no longer
make my customary list of the plethora of features I long to alterseeking after perfections . I
no longer try to extinguish my sarcasm and oddities so people appreciate me more. They can enjoy my presence, or they can get lost.I am nowT widdling the zipper in my hands, allowing the cool metal to contrast with the heat of my fingers
, I zip
ped it up, down, up, down, hoping the racket will drive
himBen away. I personally love the sound of zippers. It reminds me of the sound of fall jackets and jumping into piles of multicolored leaves, the sound of getting ready to battle
it out in an intense snowball fight in the backyard, the sound of slipping into each dress for each dance
that is sure to be the night of my life,the sounds of freedom.
Suddenly, my zipper
just got caught on a thread. How obnoxious. Why must every good thing encounter obstacles? I vividly recall the first time I popped a string on my guitar. Trivial, right? Not to me. I had been in the middle of teaching myself the solo to "Layla" when it happened. I was embraced by the melody
; my eyes closed
andas my body
rollingswaying in sync with the unique rhythm. Then, TWANG! My E string
hadrupturedsnapped in two. I was devastated until I realized that I could learn to replace the string myself. And so I did. I
amwas tugging on the thread that
is hinder
ed my zipper by using the full strength of my bicep. It broke.
And to think, all of these fantastical features sewn into a single work of art!
A memory just surfaced from my subconscious . I
remembered when Iamwas 5 years old and wearing a pair of light pink footie pajamas
(Pink? What a fail, Mom) . It
iswas one of those days where I interrogate Mom with a fresh batch of questions
that I thought of overnight. "Does rain come from God's shower? Why do Ben and Jonathan look so different if they are twins? What are people made of?" If only there
wasis something that could represent what I am made of. This whole college application thing would surely be eighty-five times easier.
"So how is that essay coming along?" Ben teased. "I don't know what to write about!" I cried in frustration, forgetting that I
was supposed to be pretending
that he
doesn't existwasn't there . "Write about your footie pajamas," he said with a snigger. Hah. Write about footie pajamas for a college essay? How absurd, how ridiculous, how ingenious! How me.