lillehcai
Nov 14, 2013
Undergraduate / Common App essay on failure: finding confidence through Model UN [4]
Hey guys and thanks for your comments! Sorry for not updating :<
This is the newest version and near-final draft. I'm quite happy with it :) Still, any sort of input/feedback is welcomed.
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Three years ago, my friend scolded me: "I could count on one hand the number of times you spoke in conference!" I was offended by her wake up call, but she was right - my first Model United Nations conference was a disaster.
I had always been branded as "shy." My 14-year-old self thought that MUN would be the lesson in confidence I sorely needed. But public speaking evidently didn't come naturally to me, even as my friend was shooting me glances trying to pressure me into speaking up during MUN sessions. I knew she was thinking: "Lillian, what are you doing planted in your seat? You're Russia! Russia should say something!" After a couple months of this silliness, I decided to take a chance and sign up for my first conference. "This is it! I'm finally going to show my potential!" I thought.
But I didn't. During that first conference, I was planted in my seat, scared like a mouse, same as always. So after that wake-up call, I knew I needed to turn things around - quickly. Months later, on the plane ride to my second conference, I told myself: "Lillian, you're going to do okay. Don't let it be like the first conference all over again. Try not to trip over your nerves."
Thankfully, I didn't trip over my nerves, surprising others but especially myself by winning an award. And when I realized I could do better than I thought, I tried again at another conference. Then another. Somewhere along the way, as I learned to write proper resolutions, dress the part, and carry myself like a diplomat, I regained the confidence I hadn't had for years. It was refreshing.
Presenting a confident image in public didn't come naturally to me. I had to continuously step outside my comfort zone. Although a common piece of advice is to be "you," I believe that my former personality prevented me from being the best I could become. In the Disney movie, Princess Jasmine escapes from the confines of her world and sees a whole new world by venturing outside her palace. MUN was how I escaped my limitations and discovered my world of possibilities.
Three years ago, I truly wouldn't have thought that I would be the person I am today. I came to realize that I could overcome my shyness - a quality that I had resigned myself to believe would be permanent - and was capable of much more. I realized that testing or pushing past my boundaries could be rewarding in inconceivable ways, because one's boundaries can never be clearly defined. There is infinite potential manifested in each individual.
The thought of changing one's personality is sometimes intimidating. It seems easier and more comforting to stay the same, to continue existing in the familiar, but that really doesn't get one anywhere. In MUN, I was motivated to abandon the familiar and change quickly, and I felt in control of myself for the first time because change was what I wanted and welcomed.
While I am intimidated by the future, I also actually feel secure in its unpredictability: there are so many possibilities and so much potential that I haven't yet had the chance to explore. I've come to realize that as long as I can adapt, just as I was able to in MUN, the future seems less scary. Ultimately, the only person who can help you is yourself. After all, genies and magic lamps don't exist. We create our own future, and we are living it every day.
Hey guys and thanks for your comments! Sorry for not updating :<
This is the newest version and near-final draft. I'm quite happy with it :) Still, any sort of input/feedback is welcomed.
__________________________________________________________
Three years ago, my friend scolded me: "I could count on one hand the number of times you spoke in conference!" I was offended by her wake up call, but she was right - my first Model United Nations conference was a disaster.
I had always been branded as "shy." My 14-year-old self thought that MUN would be the lesson in confidence I sorely needed. But public speaking evidently didn't come naturally to me, even as my friend was shooting me glances trying to pressure me into speaking up during MUN sessions. I knew she was thinking: "Lillian, what are you doing planted in your seat? You're Russia! Russia should say something!" After a couple months of this silliness, I decided to take a chance and sign up for my first conference. "This is it! I'm finally going to show my potential!" I thought.
But I didn't. During that first conference, I was planted in my seat, scared like a mouse, same as always. So after that wake-up call, I knew I needed to turn things around - quickly. Months later, on the plane ride to my second conference, I told myself: "Lillian, you're going to do okay. Don't let it be like the first conference all over again. Try not to trip over your nerves."
Thankfully, I didn't trip over my nerves, surprising others but especially myself by winning an award. And when I realized I could do better than I thought, I tried again at another conference. Then another. Somewhere along the way, as I learned to write proper resolutions, dress the part, and carry myself like a diplomat, I regained the confidence I hadn't had for years. It was refreshing.
Presenting a confident image in public didn't come naturally to me. I had to continuously step outside my comfort zone. Although a common piece of advice is to be "you," I believe that my former personality prevented me from being the best I could become. In the Disney movie, Princess Jasmine escapes from the confines of her world and sees a whole new world by venturing outside her palace. MUN was how I escaped my limitations and discovered my world of possibilities.
Three years ago, I truly wouldn't have thought that I would be the person I am today. I came to realize that I could overcome my shyness - a quality that I had resigned myself to believe would be permanent - and was capable of much more. I realized that testing or pushing past my boundaries could be rewarding in inconceivable ways, because one's boundaries can never be clearly defined. There is infinite potential manifested in each individual.
The thought of changing one's personality is sometimes intimidating. It seems easier and more comforting to stay the same, to continue existing in the familiar, but that really doesn't get one anywhere. In MUN, I was motivated to abandon the familiar and change quickly, and I felt in control of myself for the first time because change was what I wanted and welcomed.
While I am intimidated by the future, I also actually feel secure in its unpredictability: there are so many possibilities and so much potential that I haven't yet had the chance to explore. I've come to realize that as long as I can adapt, just as I was able to in MUN, the future seems less scary. Ultimately, the only person who can help you is yourself. After all, genies and magic lamps don't exist. We create our own future, and we are living it every day.