Unanswered [1]
  

Posts by combo32
Joined: Oct 18, 2012
Last Post: Oct 30, 2012
Threads: 2
Posts: 2  
From: United States of America

Displayed posts: 4
sort: Oldest first   Latest first  | 
combo32   
Oct 18, 2012
Undergraduate / Common App essay - my childhood visit to the Discovery Museum. [2]

Hello :) This is my common app essay. Unfortunately, I haven't had much time to work on it, so it is still in draft mode, but hopefully it will be fine for the early deadline. For a few notes...I am most worried about the ending. Should I spend more or less time describing the visit's impact on my current self? Does it sound cliche/unoriginal? Also, please look through my essay's body for anything that could be clarified, elaborated on, or cut out.

One of my most meaningful childhood memories has a temperature of below -300 degrees Fahrenheit.
During a warm summer afternoon seven years ago, my family and I went to the local Discovery Museum and Planetarium. I was immediately intrigued, yet confused, when seeing the science museum's displays such as radiant laser systems and images of probes in space. Next to the exhibits were the "laboratories" for children, playgrounds where my brothers and I would unravel the universe.

In particular, I was attracted to the liquid nitrogen demonstration. The container the employee prepared looked like it was filled with steam, yet it appeared more dense and nebulous. And it was cold - colder than -300 degrees Fahrenheit, making me wonder "How far can nature go?" As the employee described the properties of liquid nitrogen, I couldn't help feeling astonished by the substance. It seemed surreal, mysterious, dangerous, deluding me with its presence. I needed to know more.

The museum staff prepared an experiment, in which an employee submerged an air-filled balloon into the container of liquid nitrogen. Being sure to exercise proper caution, she lowered the inflated balloon into the container - and to my amazement, it appeared to shrivel up, like a decaying leaf detached from its tree. I was again intrigued; the balloon seemed to deflate, to die, something that my 5th grade education couldn't explain. It was nature in a seemingly unnatural state. But I was reassured when I learned that the oxygen in the balloon had too been liquefied, and that placing it on a warm surface would return it to normal. I was amazed. It had been resurrected from the dead.

Despite this awesome conclusion, I wasn't truly amazed by the balloon display. I wasn't truly amazed by how cold the substance was. I wasn't even truly amazed by how it could be used to prepare ice cream. Instead, I was left in awe at how much I didn't know; I, the 5th grade scholar, who was placed in gifted math and English. I thought I knew so much. That day elucidated how oblivious I was to the rest of the world, and actually how joyous it was to still be so open to new ideas, to have the capability to absorb so much.

Six years later, I observed the outside surroundings. The sky was dark, yet I could not see the stars, for they seemed to be cloaked in mystery, like the liquid nitrogen of six years ago. It began to appear in the sky. It appeared in the trees, in the earth, in the stars, in other human beings. And during all of this, I saw my childish nature reborn. I still have that natural curiosity. I still have that insatiable hunger. There was that simple joy of being so open to knowledge that still attracted me, that made me want to not only answer the questions of the universe but create more. And the luminescent stars, the sky, the woods, and all of nature's enigmas revealed to me that the once dormant curiosity of an intrigued 5th grader has finally awoken, with the voracity of a lion to expand and apply those lessons from liquid nitrogen.
combo32   
Oct 30, 2012
Undergraduate / Capitilizing on others mistakes, and turning them into advantages for me. [3]

Hi, some feedback.
" I realized right from wrong, from actions that he had taken" - change from actions that he had taken to from his actions.

I think you mean "striving to be a well-rounded person." You forgot person.

"I learned, from a very young age, that being lazy is a bad habit to obtain. Laziness leads to procrastination which, to some extent, leads to failure. Failure was not something that I wanted in my life because it shows people that you aren't a "go-getter." I think admissions knows that laziness is bad and can cause procrastination. Also, you should mention how failure is unavoidable, and that it is the stimulus for success.

"Being second might be undesirable at first glance, but it is beneficial in the long run." Unintentionally desirable seems a bit vague - you desire something, but you don't mean to do so? I think what you mean is that being second is helpful, but you just didn't realized it until some point.

Overall nice job.
combo32   
Oct 30, 2012
Undergraduate / The game of GOLF; MIT/ Significant challenge you've faced [3]

"So I decided to teach myself the golf. I realized that this would be a monumental challenge, but that was the appeal. What I didn't realize\ was just how much this project would change my life."

A couple of redundancy fixes, hopefully without changing meaning.

Good job describing how golf makes you feel, how it impacted you, rather than just describing the sport itself.
combo32   
Oct 30, 2012
Undergraduate / '25 years of hidden solitude' - UChicago Response - Where's Waldo? [2]

After so much procrastination, I finally finished this. Please comment.

25 years have I remained hidden.
I was once a great traveler like you. I traversed Paris, beaches across the world, the center of the earth, even space. Heisenberg couldn't determine my position or my momentum, and I bent space-time. How futile you are to question where I am!

But the realities of a globalized world caught up to me. What use is there in reading the countless books detailing my location, or exploring the world just to see my face when a simple Google search can reveal all? Soon the U.S. and China began to discuss my whereabouts, and I had to hide somewhere else. Then it was England. The rest of Europe. Africa, Asia, then the world. To escape the infinite cameras of the Internet and of the international community became impossible. I cannot hide.

25 years of solitude. The world wasn't satisfied with just my location. Within days of my discovery, myriads began to assume my name. I became known as Hugo in Sweden, or Charlie in France, bearing little resemblance to the title my mother bestowed upon me. Not only did they take my name and my credit card info in the largest identity theft crisis this world has ever seen, but soon they took my signature red and white shirt. First the shopping franchises, then Canada, and now Santa Claus: what does my once-distinguishable apparel mean now? What am I now?

I found my original identity by being lost in a crowd. The infinite cries, "Where are you? Where are you?" fueled my very existence, motivated me to travel in seclusion. But today's world is different. There is a crowd in front of me. 6.9 billion people mock me. They jeer, laugh. 6.9 billion red and white stripes. Gazing, searching until there is nowhere left to run. Nowhere left to hide.

25 years of everything. 25 years of nothing.
They begin to cheer. Their faces become animalistic, hungry, ready to devour me - they know where I am, and they are coming for me. My screams are drowned under their shouts "I found him! I found him! There he is! It's Waldo!" I can only think of one thing.

Where am I?
ⓘ Need academic writing help? 100% custom and human!
Fill out one of these forms for professional help:

Best Writing Service:
CustomPapers form ◳

Graduate Writing / Editing:
GraduateWriter form ◳

Excellence in Editing:
Rose Editing ◳

AI-Paper Rewriting:
Robot Rewrite ◳