Undergraduate /
Calvin and Hobbes influenced my life - Common App [8]
Please help me make this essay more coherent. I don't think the meaning of my essay is really understandable...
Describe a character in fiction, a historical figure, or a creative work (as in art, music, science, etc.) that has had an influence on you, and explain that influence.When I was ten, I picked up
The Days are Just Packed by Bill Watterson, my first Calvin and Hobbes comic strip anthology. The title and the golden-brown cover stood out amongst the endless drab shelves of the used bookstore like a piece of hard candy among peanuts. I bought it, took it home, and immediately became lost in Calvin's imaginative world: a world where there are no lasting consequences, where it is possible to genuinely forget about your troubles, where Santa exists and where there is a stuffed tiger named Hobbes doubling as imaginary friend and as warden. I was enraptured by Calvin's naïve curiosity, enthralled by Hobbes' silly shrewdness. When I reached the end of the book, I was bewildered. I did not care that Calvin was only a drawing on a piece of paper. To me, he was real.
My mom had always imposed a time limit on television and my Game Boy Color when I was young. "They destroy your eyes and make you silly," replied Mom when I asked her why. "Go read a book." She loved books; they were on the same tier to her ("Brain Food") as salmon, carrots, and broccoli. So every night I would curl up in my spot on the living room couch and read my
Calvin and Hobbes books until bedtime. It was sort of like I was creating my imaginary world. Growing up in a traditional Chinese family, I was reminded every day by my parents that they did not go to college so that I could. To be a big businessman, or an engineer, or a doctor, they said. I was hard pressed to prove to my parents that their investment in my education was not going to waste, so naturally I was nothing at all like the wild Calvin in more ways than one. He was bratty and hyperactive while I was quiet and well behaved; he was using his imagination to craft worlds and fantasies while I was storing mine in a dusty compartment in the back of my mind.
But reading
Calvin and Hobbes made me realize just how important it was for me to appreciate myself. Calvin was not named after John Calvin, the theologian and philosopher famous for his theory of predestination, on accident. Calvin's consistent gripe is that the troublesome acts he commits are outside of his control; he is simply a product of his environment, a victim of circumstances. He struggles to combat this situation by creating elaborate fantasy worlds to escape to, because Calvin's actual intellect is severely underrated by everyone in his life except his imaginary friend Hobbes. His parents, classmates, and teacher see him as a troublemaker with an affinity for daydreaming; I saw him as an incredibly intelligent and compassionate kid who causes trouble to break free of his "predestination." And when that fails, he crafts his own world where he gets to decide what he is to do. Yet Calvin has also set his own course in his tangible life as well. In one strip, Calvin's mother is seated at the coffee table reading the newspaper when Calvin walks past her and quotes Paul Gauguin. "'Whence do we come? What are we? Where are we going?' Well, I don't know about anyone else, but I came from my room. I'm a kid with big plan, and I'm going outside! See ya later!" His mother is visibly shocked until Calvin adds, "Say, who the heck is Paul Gauguin anyway?"
Calvin was still in the process of discovering the world around him. Like me, he still has much to learn about everything. But he also holds the determination to assert his individuality. Calvin inspired me to appreciate my own abilities and understand that it was up to me to decide my future. Since the day I picked up my first
Calvin and Hobbes anthology, I've read every single strip of
Calvin and Hobbes through the anthologies countless times. Those books are the only childhood items I've kept, and they have their permanent spot on my computer desk. They serve as a reminder to me that, like a certain precocious six year old, I am fully ready to determine my own course in life.