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Posts by AIRanimechiic
Joined: Dec 25, 2009
Last Post: Jan 2, 2010
Threads: 2
Posts: 22  

From: United States of America

Displayed posts: 24
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AIRanimechiic   
Jan 2, 2010
Undergraduate / Victorious Little Umbrella Essay - Boston University Essay [5]

i like ur essay. its semi-unique. but no offense, while your conclusion is "strong", its the type of conclusion that's been used by so, so, so, many students (which is why i've tried not to do that) and become drab and boring.

your spontaneous paragraph makes it sound like you're a saint and is a little too fake. maybe you should use some stronger show examples rather than listing?

but overall, its tightly written, which is good
btw, could you look at mine too?
AIRanimechiic   
Jan 2, 2010
Student Talk / Application Question January [127]

oh shoot. btw, the schools on the common app see both the app's essay AND its own supplement's essay rite?
AIRanimechiic   
Jan 2, 2010
Student Talk / Application Question January [127]

scripps, hamilton, and BU on the common app... all three apps got in (aka they have the green triangle) and at first the payment thing was a red triangle but i got emails saying they were successfully submitted. even though i just set them in an hour ago in western time

maybe its cause i live in california???
AIRanimechiic   
Jan 2, 2010
Student Talk / Application Question January [127]

im wondering what happened to all of you guys. i was actually able to submit both the app AND the supplement fine... it just still has the red triangle for payment (even tho it says "received")
AIRanimechiic   
Jan 2, 2010
Student Talk / Application Question January [127]

oh shoot. i was able to submit the SUPPPLEMEnt... the app is still...
AIRanimechiic   
Jan 1, 2010
Undergraduate / Boston U [Why Boston and Three Words About You]; Needle/ knot/ paper [11]

wow. these are very good. the penpal one is perfect and the concept behind using objects rather adjectives is going to stick out (too many people use things like "creative" blah)

however, the beginning sentences of your intro and conclusion are kind of cheesy and don't match the flow of the rest of the essay. i think that's something you can fix.

We can all agree that without the knot, mankind would not be where it is right now.

i think you can come up with a better sentence than that for the knot section. unfortunately, im sure most people would say mankind could have got without the knot.

can u look @ my BU essay too?
AIRanimechiic   
Dec 30, 2009
Undergraduate / USC Essay + NYU Short answers critique [12]

darnit! i can't go edit my post but whatevs.
anyways, i hope i can get some really critical, simon cowell-like critiques.
AIRanimechiic   
Dec 30, 2009
Undergraduate / USC Essay + NYU Short answers critique [12]

USC app - activity, academic interests, and main essay

i'm going to submit it tomorrow night (even tho the deadline is next week) so any help is appreciated! this time i'm not censuring out my illness in the full essay, so pleease don't talk about this essay elsewhere ><

1.Tell us about an activity that is important to you, and why. Please feel free to talk about an activity other than one you may have discussed in your essay.

I step back from my 3-hour long creation: a two-and-a-half foot long mushroom canon, consisting of 2 cylindrical white-pocka-dotted purple cushions, sewn together by hand, and wrapped completely by three lengthy strips of white cloth. This was the final component to my cosplay for Ururu Tsumugiya. As the president of my school's Japanese Animation Club, I'm in charge of coming up with activities for them. Last year, however, I changed the course of the club from watching shows every lunch time, to planning out costumes and skits for conventions. Cosplaying, however, is not the first time I've performed in costume. Since sixth grade, I've held lead roles in school plays, exerting the necessity to envelope myself within a different person. Transforming into someone else using looks and actions is something I'm rather comfortable doing, so that part of cosplaying was easy to get used to. On the other hand, cosplaying properly required me to come up with my own costumes and skits. Although I am still inept at replicating costumes, I still find enjoyment being on stage and performing.

2. 2. Describe your academic interests and how you plan to pursue them at USC. Please feel free to address your first- and second-choice major selections.
The first thing I noticed about the Anna Bing Arnold Plaza was the octangular fountain with a hole in it. I thought: wow, this is the most creative fountain I've ever seen- inside-out! When I visited USC on free time during AX 2009, I wanted to check it out to make sure it was somewhere I really would want to go. According to my beliefs, I wanted to go to somewhere that provokes creativity, artistic expression, and above all, words, lots of words. I love analyzing literature till it lay thread-bare or writing something so complex it doesn't make sense; the same way I would do it with music. While I generally don't compose music myself, finding pieces to learn ...

How should I finish off about English and music and USC?

Thomas Edison failed many times before successfully inventing the modern... Reflect on a challenge you overcame through persistence.
It's summer vacation between fourth and fifth grades. I'm sitting on the arm of a couch, watching T.V., when suddenly I collapse. Several possibilities arise as to why I collapsed- was it so hot I fainted? Did someone push me over? Did I slip and fall? No, I had a seizure. When I awoke in the hospital with my mom crying by my side, the doctors informed me that I had been diagnosed with epilepsy, a seizure disorder. My life was never the same.

Not too long after, I displayed a seizure at school. I then became shunned as the "crazy fainting girl". Since I went to a small K-8 elementary school, word spread fast and I was teased, ridiculed, and isolated. I was muted and silenced- verbally oppressed, I call it. I turned against my classmates, because I felt them turn against me. I ended up spending many hours doing things by myself- reading, writing, drawing, and, a few months after that first seizure, learning to play the piano. Everything in my elementary/middle school years felt like a haze, a blur of humiliating memories I would like to hide forever. Even the plays I starred in, and the fine arts award at my 8th grade graduation felt meaningless because no one my age was there to celebrate honestly. I couldn't wait for high school because no one would know me; no one would know my problem or prejudge me based on it. It was a beacon of hope.

The first thing I did during a break period in high school was something I would never have done before- I just sat down in front of someone who was alone and began to introduce myself. This was new, this was exhilarating. Clinging onto the belief that no one here knew anything that happened in my old school was what kept me happy for a while. I didn't realize that this belief was just an excuse to hide from my condition. Then in my junior year, I partnered up with a friend to win 2nd place in the music category of my school talent show. In my freshman and sophomore years when I tried to enter the talent show by myself, I was never successful. Hiding behind the curtain while the judges announced the winners of the category after music, I wondered why things worked when I was with another person. Was it because of my friend? Was it because I wasn't trying to win for once? Was it because I was going with the flow and not fighting a useless current? I noticed that this achievement had authenticity at its core. If I made something up solely for the purpose of winning, it would not work. If I made it based off of pure thoughts and feelings, I would succeed. Non-selfish ideas work out best, and thus much last longer.

That first seizure changed the course of my life. It made me want to hide from everyone, to hide from myself, and to dislike myself. So why did I suddenly open up in high school? I figured it must have been because I was tired of hiding and running. Hide-and-seek with epilepsy was getting tiring. So I faced it with activities that the old me would never do. In fact, I still do that everywhere- at the skating rink, in summer camps, at conventions. I became the seeker.
AIRanimechiic   
Dec 30, 2009
Undergraduate / USC Essay + NYU Short answers critique [12]

oh haha, the semicolons were only there because original version was the sixteen line chorus of song i wrote so i had to shorten it.

just curious, what do you guys find so good about the poem???

@spacerelay : that underscore/line was actually one of the removed words about my medical condition so i dont need to fix it :D
AIRanimechiic   
Dec 29, 2009
Undergraduate / the FARTING ESSAY: my original common app essay [11]

no offense... um comedy doesn'talways work with essays. especially if it ends up offending the admissions officers. its like that kid who had straight A's, great SAT scores, tons of AP classes, class president, had "the works", but then screwed it up when he wrote an essay about condoms. talking about farting says nothing about you and how you relate to academics and a person, etc.

if you're trying to write a original funny essay, how about writing about an funny experience you had with your friend and how that uhhh inspired or what-not you?

i like your last paragraph tho
AIRanimechiic   
Dec 29, 2009
Undergraduate / NYU Supplement - famous New Yorker, year 2050, short poem [15]

for everyone who's writing the same prompt... i just have a question, the NYU short answer famous New Yorker prompt says the famous new yorker doesn't necessarily have to be born and raised in New York... but would a character from a New York Bestseller novel work even if the character never steps foot in NY?
AIRanimechiic   
Dec 28, 2009
Undergraduate / I am different, risk-taker, seeker. Boston U Supp- 3 words that describe you. [5]

In an essay of no more than 500 words, please select 3 words that describe you best and tell us how you will use these qualities/characteristics to contribute fully to the BU community.

On the first day of kindergarten, I knew there was something that separated me from the rest of my classmates: I spoke no English. In fifth grade, I had a seizure in front of everyone in the class; the gap between my classmates and I expanded. In high school, I was the only student in my home room that came from a private middle school.

These differences, and more, separated me from everyone else. I was strange, different, an oddball. In elementary/middle school, I was the outsider. Back then, I was ashamed of these differences. I wanted to fit in with everyone, desperate to be the same as everyone else so they would accept me. I frequently tried to pretend to be someone else. However, it didn't make me feel right. Like Susan "Stargirl" Caraway from Stargirl by Jerry Spinelli, I strive for individuality, for uniqueness; to be someone that's not the same. Rather than hiding my differences, I show it off, wear it proudly. I wear long skirts instead of skinny jeans, I bike instead of take the bus, and I bring homemade lunches instead of eating in the cafeteria. I no longer fear being the only one standing up in a sea of sitting people.

I get a guilty kick in the stomach when people are afraid of doing something outside the norm. Because of my past experiences, one of the things I vow never to do is exclude others. The first thing I did during a break in high school was sitting down in front of a solo someone and began introducing myself. The first thing I did during a public session at my skating school was begin talking to a lonely stranger in my class. The first thing I accomplished with the Japanese Animation Club when I was the new president was bring them with me to a convention. I now tend to do that a lot- take a necessary risk when the urge calls for it.

I used to hide a lot. In elementary school, I hid in the bathroom during lunch. I blamed many things for the epilepsy I was diagnosed with. Whenever I was faced with difficult things, I attempted to make something else the scapegoat. Like the game of hide-and-seek, I kept running and hiding, hoping never to be found. In the completely different environment of high school, however, I had no chance to do that. There were too many opportunities to not skip out on, so many clubs to join, so many new activities that were possible to grab. I did that- taking any advanced class I could get accepted into [?]

I am different. I am risk-taker. I am a seeker. Those things are what I feel are a necessity for students who want to make a change, who want to take a stab in the right direction.

but then... i sort of altered my NYU essay to read this: (does it sound better for the BU prompt?)
"Names have power."- YƱko Ichihara (xxxHolic)
Loveless is an anime (Japanese animation) originally written and drawn by Yun Kouga. While by no means it's my favorite, the thing it's most notable for, however, is its use of names. Three the names in that series happen to be names I can feel a connection towards.

Loveless: The owner of this name happens to be the troubled 12-year-old protagonist, Ritsuka Aoyagi. He's troubled because of the supposed death of his older brother. I'm troubled, in a sense, like that, too. When I was in elementary and middle school, I lacked acceptance and, well, "love" from my classmates; I had no support, no friends my age outside my family back then. Thus, when I entered high school, I took the best shot I could get to turn my life completely around. The first thing I did during a break period in high school was something I would never have done before- I just sat down in front of someone who was alone and began to introduce myself. I don't relate to this name because I'm "unloved", but because now I make sure no one is lacking in that.

Fearless: This is the battle name for Mimuro and Mei, the possibly strongest team after Zero and Beloved. Basically, it means they are not afraid when fighting, like me. I get a guilty kick in the stomach when people are afraid of doing something outside the norm. Because of my past experiences, one of the things I vow never to do is exclude others. The first thing I did during a break in high school was sitting down in front of a solo someone and began introducing myself. The first thing I did during a public session at my skating school was begin talking to a lonely stranger in my class. The first thing I accomplished with the Japanese Animation Club when I was the new president was bring them with me to a convention. I don't cower in a corner anymore.

Limitless: Most fans of Loveless create their own battle names for fun. I chose "Limitless", not because I'm not immortal, but because I believe that the things I enjoy have no end, no boundaries. I have three published poems, and continually accumulating novels, short stories, and scripts sitting in two shelves of my bookcase. The list of new creative works is ever-growing today. Someone once said, "Don't tell me the sky's the limit when there are footprints on the moon." To me, there is no end to the infinite list of opportunities and possibilities in my imagination.

Loveless. Fearless. Limitless. While those just happen to be names in the series, Loveless, they are also qualities that I relate to, that I can give to others.

which one is better? im kind of leaning towards the altered NYU essay now...
AIRanimechiic   
Dec 28, 2009
Undergraduate / The Tenacious Protest--Common App Essay [17]

you didn;t provide a prompt, so i'm just proofreading what i see wrong.

I became increasingly involved with my Punjabi culture ever since I was twelve years old.

do you mean increasing interested?

Through this school...

I was even trained in the basic form of sword fighting, although we used sticks instead of actual swords.

However, not only did the families of those dead loved ones not get compensated but many Sikhs are still in prisons under false accusations.And there is nothing that is being done.

no offense, but while that sounds dramatic and all, its kind of weak and not quiiite so relevant to the sentence before it.

Kiran stopped us and pointed at the date. Our faces dropped. The protest was in two days.

who's Kiran? you could at least say "Kiran, the teacher in charge" or something like that. if you just suddenly introduce the name, it sounds kinda strange. however, i don't know if that actually matters >.>

Although no one in India had even heard about the parade, it had a tenacious effect on all of us.

btw, would you like to check out my essay? (USC essay + NYU short answers)
AIRanimechiic   
Dec 28, 2009
Undergraduate / "some Americans had this impression of Africa" - Common App essay. [5]

I love your opening. you should also fix some things.

my reaction most of the time was laughing hysterically at these ridiculous questions.

I arrived to the United States in March 2006. I started as a freshman in high school August of that year and was nervous as a cat long-tailed cat in a room full of rocking chairs or should I say as nervous as a bride. Walking to into the school building with a jacket bigger than me was the first mistake I made and carrying a book bag heavier than I was .

The words in red don't make sense.

They made fun of my accent, well that didn't bother me because I was proud of speaking different and unique.

Fix that, it doesn't make sense (grammatically).

Teachers also had a huge issue pronouncing my name. I thought to myself, "I t's not that hard to pronounce, my name is like one of the simplest name you could come across."

...called me "The African Girl" since I was the only African in my school. Every day in school was a different experience. It is either someone asks a really redundant question or they make fun of me by throwing "darts" pieces of paper at me and tell me to retaliate with a spear. I tried telling them so many times that I do not even know how to throw darts and nor do I know how to use a spear. Many jokes were said, things I did not even know about were used to humiliate me.

Eventually, I made friends who appreciated me for who I am and my culture. They want to learn different things about Africa as a whole.

how did you make friends? what urged you to find/make them? also, your ending is kind of weak.

There's also a few tiny grammatical errors here and there that you can pick out if you stick this in a word processor. (Sorry i'm a little harsh- I'm one of the editors of my school newspaper and i am a crazy proofreader).

Hope this helps!
AIRanimechiic   
Dec 28, 2009
Undergraduate / USC Essay + NYU Short answers critique [12]

Hi. I'm new here, so i hope i do this right.
***In the USC essay, i removed certain words about this condition I have that I would prefer not to be floating around the internet. e**** and ____ are basically replacing those words. I'll put them back in when I submit the application

USC essay: THOMAS EDISON FAILED MANY TIMES BEFORE SUCCESSFULLY INVENTING THE MODERN LIGHT BULB. HE SAID, "IF I FIND 10K WAYS SOMETHING DOESN'T WORK, I HAVEN'T FAILED..." REFLECT ON A CHALLENGE YOU OVERCAME THROUGH PERSISTANCE.

" It's summer vacation between fourth and fifth grades. I'm sitting on the arm of a couch, watching T.V., when suddenly I collapse. Several possibilities arise as to why I collapsed- was it so hot I fainted? Did someone push me over? Did I slip and fall? No, I had a _____. When I awoke in the hospital with my mom crying by my side, the doctors informed me that I had been diagnosed with e*****, a _____ disorder. My life was never the same.

Not too long after, I displayed a _____ at school. I then became shunned as the "crazy fainting girl". Since I went to a small K-8 elementary school, word spread fast and I was teased, ridiculed, and isolated. I was muted and silenced- verbally oppressed, I call it. I turned against my classmates, because I felt them turn against me. I ended up spending many hours doing things by myself- reading, writing, drawing, and, a few months after that first _____, learning to play the piano. Everything in my elementary/middle school years felt like a haze, a blur of humiliating memories I would like to hide forever. Even the plays I starred in, and the fine arts award at my 8th grade graduation felt meaningless because no one my age was there to celebrate honestly. I couldn't wait for high school because no one would know me; no one would know my problem or prejudge me based on it. It was a beacon of hope.

The first thing I did during a break period in high school was something I would never have done before- I just sat down in front of someone who was alone and began to introduce myself. This was new, this was exhilarating. Clinging onto the belief that no one here knew anything that happened in my old school was what kept me happy for a while. I didn't realize that this belief was just an excuse to hide from my condition. Then in my junior year, I partnered up with a friend to win 2nd place in the music category of my school talent show. In my freshman and sophomore years when I tried to enter the talent show by myself, I was never successful. Hiding behind the curtain while the judges announced the winners of the category after music, I wondered why things worked when I was with another person. Was it because of my friend? Was it because I wasn't trying to win for once? Was it because I was going with the flow and not fighting a useless current? I noticed that this achievement had authenticity at its core. If I made something up solely for the purpose of winning, it would not work. If I made it based off of pure thoughts and feelings, I would succeed. Non-selfish ideas work out best, and thus much last longer.

That first _____ changed the course of my life. It made me want to hide from everyone, to hide from myself, and to dislike myself. So why did I suddenly open up in high school? I figured it must have been because I was tired of hiding and running. Hide-and-seek with e***** was getting tiring. So I faced it with activities that the old me would never do. In fact, I still do that everywhere- at the skating rink, in summer camps, at conventions. I became the seeker. "

NYU Short answers:
Write a haiku, limerick, or short (eight lines or less) poem that best represents you
Don't you feel like you're falling; from the sky to the ground
No one hears your calling; It's shallow yet profound
Rather than downwards; I want to ascend high
Feeling the glory; Of my full-length wings
I want to fly; straight into the sky
Nobody's gonna stop me; I won't let them try
Tears streaming down; won't lower my ground
Cause I want to rise and fly
In the year 2050, a movie is being made about your life. Please tell us the name of your movie and briefly summarize the story line.

"Hide and Seek" - Disease. Loneliness. Triumph. The world [my real name] lives in as she tries to face down her epilepsy is these things and more. Watch as this young lady falls from grace as she attempts to hide her problems with epilepsy, but grows to fight back and be cured.

Please tell us what led you to select your anticipated academic program and/or NYU school/college and what interests you most about your intended discipline.

My parents weren't very adequate in English when I was in elementary school. So, when I was little, every weekend they would take me to the library in hopes of improving both their English and mine at the same time. Once I was old enough to understand what books I was actually checking out, I began writing. If I turn to the right and look at my bookshelf right now, I have two shelves full of scrap paper stapled, taped, or glued together. They aren't actually scrap paper though- they are paper picture books that I've handwritten or drawn in my free time in third through seventh grades. If I turn to the left, I have a closet. Inside that closet, there is a shoebox full of notebooks. These, however, happen to be diaries, journals, and travelogues that I've kept since fifth grade. If I opened the another USB drive I have linked to my key lanyard, I would find three folders full of short stories, novellas, and poems I've written since eighth grade. These all happen to be samples of writing I've sketched up in my spare time. My favorite classes were always English in middle school, and I loved writing for the newspaper in high school. I even got poems published in a couple anthologies. If I look back in my old kindergarten worksheets with topics such as "What do you want to be when you grow up?" I realized they should all have been an author. I even remember saying that one day in fourth grade. My lifelong interest in writing and creating is something that I hope I can continue on in secondary education and further.

Thank you! Any assistance would be appreciated, especially regarding grammar, diction, flow, etc. etc.
AIRanimechiic   
Dec 25, 2009
Undergraduate / "flashlight" Movie storyline-NYU supplement [3]

Sorry, I hate to break it to you, but if you reread the supplement, the 2050 movie question of the supplement is supposed to be a "short answer". It's 500 characters, not 500 words. Which means you need to shorten it down to about a paragraph...

If you remember movie synopsises of today's movies, such as "Avatar" or "Twilight", you'll get how short the response is supposed to be. I suggest that you write something like "Title- the story of a young person living through ... and how she ... finally coming to... etc."
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