LillieFlorez
Sep 18, 2010
Undergraduate / Nobody can do everything, but everyone can do something. The issue of my concern. [6]
Discuss some issue of personal, local, national, or international concern and its importance to you.
250 words
um essay
Nobody can do everything, but everyone can do something.
For the past eight months, I have dedicated my spare time in providing assistance to an organization called Life Impact. Life Impact sends out supplies for the millions of people affected by the earthquake in Haiti. I have discovered that just an hour of service can help hundreds to thousands of unaided people receive food, health care, and daily supplies needed to survive life in an area devastated by a horrifying disaster.
My father was in Haiti at the time of the earthquake and it was devastating not knowing where he was or if he was even alive. For three days my family and I were concerned about his condition and location. On the fourth day, we received a call from a family member in Haiti that he was alive and being escorted to a plane that was sending U.S. citizens back to America. From that day and on my family and I have put our concern on providing for the Haitian people. Things we take for granted here can be highly valuable to someone with not even clothes to wear. We've learned that just a little gesture of generosity and love can go a long way.
Discuss some issue of personal, local, national, or international concern and its importance to you.
250 words
um essay
Nobody can do everything, but everyone can do something.
For the past eight months, I have dedicated my spare time in providing assistance to an organization called Life Impact. Life Impact sends out supplies for the millions of people affected by the earthquake in Haiti. I have discovered that just an hour of service can help hundreds to thousands of unaided people receive food, health care, and daily supplies needed to survive life in an area devastated by a horrifying disaster.
My father was in Haiti at the time of the earthquake and it was devastating not knowing where he was or if he was even alive. For three days my family and I were concerned about his condition and location. On the fourth day, we received a call from a family member in Haiti that he was alive and being escorted to a plane that was sending U.S. citizens back to America. From that day and on my family and I have put our concern on providing for the Haitian people. Things we take for granted here can be highly valuable to someone with not even clothes to wear. We've learned that just a little gesture of generosity and love can go a long way.