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Posts by unclesamv
Joined: Dec 26, 2009
Last Post: Dec 30, 2009
Threads: 2
Posts: 4  
From: Canada

Displayed posts: 6
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unclesamv   
Dec 26, 2009
Undergraduate / Need Help on Personal Essay (supplement for Columbia) [7]

"You have to maintain a fine balance between hope and despair. In the end it's all a question of balance."
-Rohinton Mistry, A Fine Balance

Janak Road smelt putrid. There was a man bathing on the sidewalk, another defecating in an alley, crows feasting on piles of garbage in the middle of the road, and a cobbler beside them. We cautiously paced forward until the cobbler looked up at us. It was a painful sight. Her body was emaciated and her feet insect-bitten; her daily profits of two rupees were not enough for her sustenance. In a hoarse voice, she said something in Bengali and pointed at my shoes. I didn't know what to do. I gave her twenty rupees and continued to walk towards the house.

I had asked my mom to take me to 1 Janak Road. For a while, she had wanted to visit for nostalgic purposes. I wanted to visit to understand 'the past' that is so often thrown around in the Vaidyanathan household. My mom pointed to the house and we walked in. The first room, where my mom and her family of five lived, was a space the size of my bedroom. 1 Janak Road was home to two other families. It felt more like a pigsty then a home.

As the claustrophobia overcame us, we walked outside. I looked up; the clouds were parting and I knew it was going to rain. When I looked back down, a boy of no more than ten stood directly in front of me. He made a cup with his hands and lowered on one knee, begging for 'Chawal'- rice. I couldn't look him in the eye. I gave him whatever I had left, tears slowly rolling down my cheeks. That child could have been me. And he was begging to feed his family instead of playing or going to school.

I looked at mom, my face wet with sweat, tears, and rain. She looked me in the eyes and told me that I should give these children hope rather than despair- the fine balance they sought but that seemed to elude them. My mom was in Calcutta to introduce a scholarship fund for students at Calcutta's National High School. How would I contribute?

Though Janak Road may be 12,000 kilometers away, Downtown Toronto is in walking distance from my house. Call it altruism, but I call it hope. Hope for a boy in a Covenant House shelter; hope for that boy who was trying to feed his family. My hope that no child will live in a shelter or beg. Therein lies the fine balance: hope and despair are intrinsic to one another- we cannot hope for better without some anguish. But what separates the optimist from the pessimist is the view that with

hope and action, we can defeat despair- that the glass is half-full.

It is my personal optimism in the face of despair that fuels my contributions to the community. Whether through Horizons, during which my tutees learn how to play an instrument, or through Holiday Hamper, an initiative that provided 30 families with basic necessities and gifts for the Holiday season- I work so that we never let our despairs overrun our hopes. My contribution may be a speck in the grand scheme of things, but my hope is not. It is contagious- and one day it will amount to change.
unclesamv   
Dec 26, 2009
Undergraduate / UPenn Supplement Essay- Pakistan Society and One Health at Penn [3]

Good essay overall...but I feel like your 2nd paragraph is lost.

IE:With my involvement in the club I made many friends and met many new people. Penn's Pakistan Society will allow me to continue helping students who have recently come from South Asia.

The 2 sentences don't relate so you do not reach any conclusion. If you'd like to say that, combine paragraph 1 and 2.
unclesamv   
Dec 26, 2009
Undergraduate / Common App Essay (Carnatic Kid in Canada) [3]

Who cares about identity? Self-actualization, culture and identity are clichéd
terms, belonging in the vernacular of self-help books rather than teenagers. But for a teenager with conflating Canadian and Indian identities fighting to coexist, these terms mean something.

My parents are from Calcutta, where they took disadvantage and poverty and
turned it into success. Me? From Newfoundland to Toronto, I have lived throughout
Canada. I've experienced a town of 4,000 and a city of 4 million, a town where we
were the only Indian family, and a city where we are one of thousands. I have also
experienced loss, stress, heartbreak and loneliness. Regardless of where I am and
how I feel, Carnatic music provides me with a sense of consistency and balance.
I became a Canadian citizen in 1998 and began learning South Indian
Carnatic music a year later. In what would appear to be an ideal east meets west
story, I sang Carnatic music, played basketball and felt comfortable with both my
Indian and Canadian identities. But no story is interesting without some conflict.

When I first began learning Carnatic music at the age of 7, I went to a school
where my peers seemed uncomfortable with diversity. The 'cool' things to do were
sports and whatever the newest media fad was-- at the time, Crazy Bones. Seeking
the approval of my peers, I often made fun of myself and my culture. Embedded in
my self-depreciating humor was a sense of cultural uneasiness. I didn't know who I
was or who I wanted to be. I hated temple, Tamil class, and most of all, being asked to sing Carnatic music. But I also hated basketball--the de facto 'cool' sport at school. Weighing my options, I decided to pursue activities solely to win over my peers. Carnatic music was not one of those activities.

My mom insisted that I continue singing, so I did. She cited vague notions of
'preserving heritage' that I struggled to understand. My teacher, Vasumathi
Nagarajan would always tell me that I had gnanam, an innate knack for music.
Another vague notion. I was the worst in a class of three students. I would always
come unprepared to class, often balking when asked to sing alone. I always relied on the other two to practice so I could coast along. This strategy eventually stopped working, and I was demoted to a beginner class. When I was told that I would be attending Toronto's annual Thyagaraja festival, I responded with a long sigh. The only reason I would sit through a 'Kutcheri' as my parents called these concerts, was for the 25 cents I received for guessing the ragas, or scales of the songs. But this was not just any Aradhana. This would be the first time I actually participated.

I left the hall to play games until my name was called. I walked up to the
stage, set my pitch box, and began my rendition of 'Maru Gelara.' I stared at my lap,only moving my head up for the occasional peek at the audience. What would my

mom think of my performance? What would Vasumathi aunty think? In the midst of
these thoughts I forgot the words of the song. After 20 seconds of embarrassment,
an elder lady in the audience gave me the words and I finished the song.
I left the stage and walked as far from the auditorium as I could. When I
returned to ask my parents to leave the Aradhana, two young men came onto the
stage and began singing. They sounded like a duet of 60 year olds from some
obscure South Indian village, but they were 20-year-old brothers from Toronto. I
came back into the hall to congratulate them, but I could not make my way through
a crowd of admirers.

In the Indian community, a mix of cultural, social, and intellectual awareness
earns one respect. I lacked all of the above. Someone in the community was always
talking about me in a negative light- whether it was behaviorally or musically. I
resented that, but I always believed it was a tradeoff I needed to make to integrate. I had been proven wrong by the Toronto Brothers. I learned they were engineering students at the University of Toronto and professional Carnatic vocalists. They went to India every summer to learn music but still watched the Simpsons, they gave concerts, but still played basketball. They couldn't speak Tamil fluently, but they could sing. They had balanced east and west.

Whether right or wrong, I began to take music seriously to gain the respect of
my mom, teacher, and community. With a small investment of my time, I began to
learn quickly. I progressed from geethams to varnams. I began to love Carnatic
music.

I went to my first Cleveland Aradhana and competed in front of a panel of top
Carnatic musicians. I met young people facing the similar dilemma that I had. And
they had also figured it out. Most of us were 1st generation immigrants: Americans
or Canadians from India. Carnatic music was the bridge between where we had
come from and where we were now. Without language or religion to guide us, we
had just the arts. From then on, Carnatic music began to represent something far
greater than a source of respect and pride for me. It was a source of heritage and
identity.

From that class of three from which I had been demoted, I am the only
remaining student of Carnatic Music. I've given a concert, won a citywide
competition, and learned from renowned musicians. I can finally sit through a 4-
hour concert and appreciate it. I've gained the respect that I so desired from the
Indian community. I discovered something I love. But most of all, I've discovered
myself.
unclesamv   
Dec 27, 2009
Undergraduate / Need Help on Personal Essay (supplement for Columbia) [7]

My passion to learn can only be satisfied by a school with the caliber of programs and professors that Columbia offers. Columbia's Core allows students to widen their reading- from studying key works such as King Lear to taking an introductory astronomy class. Beyond the Core, Columbia offers its students the opportunity to double major, enabling me to pursue both Political Science and Economics, allowing me to not compromise learning in either field. Incidentally, these departments boast some of the best professors in the world- such as Jagdish Bhagwati, a famous Indian free-market economist.

What do you guys think of this?
Its my answer to why I want to study at Columbia
unclesamv   
Dec 30, 2009
Undergraduate / Common App Essay (Carnatic Kid in Canada) [3]

i think you've completely misread this essay

the part you said was irrelevant is the crux of this essay because those two guys were my inspiraiton

and the syntax of the first is fine- your version has way too many commas im not fond of that construction

but thanks anyways
unclesamv   
Dec 30, 2009
Undergraduate / Need Help on Personal Essay (supplement for Columbia) [7]

UCC recently began a Harkness Table style of teaching in select courses to promote class discussions and spur interest among students. At the same time, the IB program has ensured that I have been exposed to the seminal works in western thought. These factors add up to a place where students love learning- a school worth attending. Much like UCC, the Columbia Core features small-sized (70% of classes have under 20 students) discussions on the works introduced by the IB. Columbia thus appeals naturally to someone who has much more learning to do: both wider reading and learning from classmates.

The new one
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