Emmanuel222
Sep 16, 2013
Undergraduate / The catalyst to my mental development; Stanford /Intellectual [3]
middle school children are scared of what they don't understand, so quick to exile anyone who doesn't fit into their basic idea of what you should be like, if you display above average intelligence, or display an unusual fondness for books they're swift to make a social outcast, thank God I never had to deal with that otherwise I wouldn't be the person I am today. The catalyst to my development mentally was my love of novels inherited from my sister. Even from a young age I dove into the works of Jane Austen, Charles Dickens, Arthur Conan Doyle, and the rest. As i matured I developed a voracious appetite for James Patterson, Micheal Ledgewick, J.K Rowling, Frank Kafka and some of the greatest writers of the 21st century. As I traversed through these incredible worlds created by an individuals imagination my mind was opened to all sorts of influences, I took a little from each character and even now when I find myself puzzled I repeat "once you eliminate all possibilities, whatever remains no matter how improbable, is the solution"
middle school children are scared of what they don't understand, so quick to exile anyone who doesn't fit into their basic idea of what you should be like, if you display above average intelligence, or display an unusual fondness for books they're swift to make a social outcast, thank God I never had to deal with that otherwise I wouldn't be the person I am today. The catalyst to my development mentally was my love of novels inherited from my sister. Even from a young age I dove into the works of Jane Austen, Charles Dickens, Arthur Conan Doyle, and the rest. As i matured I developed a voracious appetite for James Patterson, Micheal Ledgewick, J.K Rowling, Frank Kafka and some of the greatest writers of the 21st century. As I traversed through these incredible worlds created by an individuals imagination my mind was opened to all sorts of influences, I took a little from each character and even now when I find myself puzzled I repeat "once you eliminate all possibilities, whatever remains no matter how improbable, is the solution"