Rough Draft PS
Posted: Sat Nov 30, 2013 10:19 pm
Hello, I am a nontraditional student, spent the last 5 years working in corrections and starting my own family. Now I am ready to head back to school, hoping to get into law school... Can I have some feedback, honest feedback, and constructive, as well as I am struggling with ending it, any ideas would be appreciated... More than happy to reciprocate if you want your PS read as well
It was January 2003; I had enrolled in college unsure of what I wanted to do with my life. But my world was going to change from care-free college student to full time family crisis manager. My dad had lost his job when the dot-com bubble burst. The sole supporter of our family of five had lost his job, and that was only the beginning. I immediately began looking for a job to help make ends meet, my siblings were still in high school and I would never dream of making them work as a sophomore and junior. My mother had withdrawn from the workforce several years earlier, due to depression and paranoia, which also lead to her withdrawal from her family. She buried herself in books, with an endless supply of coffee and cigarettes she rarely spoke to anyone and was usually hostile if you dared to engage her in conversation. I took the first job I could get making six dollars and thirty-five cents an hour. I worked as much as I could and continued to go to school. My dad did his best to find work but had no luck he would remain unemployed until early 2006.
In the mean time I worked full time, made good grades, paid bills, bought groceries, made sure my brother and sister did well in school and never went without. Despite my best efforts our home was placed on the foreclosure list. But life was just getting started, in February of 2004 my mother had a violent asthma attack that would lead to cardiac arrest, a brain injury and eventually her death after seven days in intensive care, and the decision made by me and my father to turn off the machines. It had only been a year, and the spiral downward only became worse. My father had lost everything; his job, his wife, and in a short time he would also lose his house. My brother was getting ready to graduate and I was going to do my best to make life as normal as possible for him and my sister. I had been paying for sports, proms, lunches, school supplies any and everything they needed I found a way. I worked three jobs, and went to school full time. After my mothers passing my sister; the youngest of us all definitely was the most openly affected by her passing. I spent as much time as I could to make sure she was okay. My brother graduated that May, and immediately went to work to help me pay bills and make ends meet. We finally were given notice to have our home vacated by August 1 2004.
In a matter of a year and a half I had become the sole supporter and provider for a family of four. Welcome to adulthood and the real world, I continued to push through school finding my passion and love in my introduction to Legal Studies class. It was amazing, arguing landmark Supreme Court cases. I was hooked, and Criminal Justice became my major after changing it several times. I took as many classes as I could and continued to do well working in bars, and clubs downtown at night, and retail stocking in the morning with school crammed in during the day. My sister graduated in 2005, and it was great. Both of my siblings had graduated, my brother was working and attending paramedic/EMT school, my sister wanted to be a nurse just my mother. My dad had slowly recovered and became employed at another technology company where he thrived. We were in a new four bedroom house that we had to rent, but it was ours. Life threw every hardball she had in my direction, and I swung for the fences.
As the time came around to graduate I contemplated what to do, I was graduating. I wanted to work with offenders and help with rehabilitation and reintegration into society. But for now I wanted to bask in what I had accomplished in the last three years. It was more than I was expecting but I came out with an invaluable experience. I rose to the occasion, and every challenge life could dish out, not only did I survive, I came out a well rounded and experienced.
It was January 2003; I had enrolled in college unsure of what I wanted to do with my life. But my world was going to change from care-free college student to full time family crisis manager. My dad had lost his job when the dot-com bubble burst. The sole supporter of our family of five had lost his job, and that was only the beginning. I immediately began looking for a job to help make ends meet, my siblings were still in high school and I would never dream of making them work as a sophomore and junior. My mother had withdrawn from the workforce several years earlier, due to depression and paranoia, which also lead to her withdrawal from her family. She buried herself in books, with an endless supply of coffee and cigarettes she rarely spoke to anyone and was usually hostile if you dared to engage her in conversation. I took the first job I could get making six dollars and thirty-five cents an hour. I worked as much as I could and continued to go to school. My dad did his best to find work but had no luck he would remain unemployed until early 2006.
In the mean time I worked full time, made good grades, paid bills, bought groceries, made sure my brother and sister did well in school and never went without. Despite my best efforts our home was placed on the foreclosure list. But life was just getting started, in February of 2004 my mother had a violent asthma attack that would lead to cardiac arrest, a brain injury and eventually her death after seven days in intensive care, and the decision made by me and my father to turn off the machines. It had only been a year, and the spiral downward only became worse. My father had lost everything; his job, his wife, and in a short time he would also lose his house. My brother was getting ready to graduate and I was going to do my best to make life as normal as possible for him and my sister. I had been paying for sports, proms, lunches, school supplies any and everything they needed I found a way. I worked three jobs, and went to school full time. After my mothers passing my sister; the youngest of us all definitely was the most openly affected by her passing. I spent as much time as I could to make sure she was okay. My brother graduated that May, and immediately went to work to help me pay bills and make ends meet. We finally were given notice to have our home vacated by August 1 2004.
In a matter of a year and a half I had become the sole supporter and provider for a family of four. Welcome to adulthood and the real world, I continued to push through school finding my passion and love in my introduction to Legal Studies class. It was amazing, arguing landmark Supreme Court cases. I was hooked, and Criminal Justice became my major after changing it several times. I took as many classes as I could and continued to do well working in bars, and clubs downtown at night, and retail stocking in the morning with school crammed in during the day. My sister graduated in 2005, and it was great. Both of my siblings had graduated, my brother was working and attending paramedic/EMT school, my sister wanted to be a nurse just my mother. My dad had slowly recovered and became employed at another technology company where he thrived. We were in a new four bedroom house that we had to rent, but it was ours. Life threw every hardball she had in my direction, and I swung for the fences.
As the time came around to graduate I contemplated what to do, I was graduating. I wanted to work with offenders and help with rehabilitation and reintegration into society. But for now I wanted to bask in what I had accomplished in the last three years. It was more than I was expecting but I came out with an invaluable experience. I rose to the occasion, and every challenge life could dish out, not only did I survive, I came out a well rounded and experienced.