New to TLS.com, please critique my personal statement!
Posted: Wed Sep 10, 2014 4:22 pm
I toyed with a few ideas before writing this, but this seemed the most relevant/real to my personal experiences. PLEASE feel free to comment on anything on this from topic to grammar (I have thick skin so don't be afraid to be terse). Any help advice is much appreciated! Thank you!
Personal Statement
Put bluntly, growing up was not easy for me. I spent my early childhood living in a troubled neighborhood where people would literally get shot for hanging around with the wrong crowd, where kids as young as 11 were being initiated into gangs (usually involving physical or sexual violence), and where aspirations for life were about as low as they get. Although the majority of my childhood wasn’t spent in that neighborhood, that is where my story began. Eventually my family moved away from Los Angeles and up to central California where there were a lot of relatives. I remember having to move from one family member’s house to another. At one point my entire immediate family, all six of us, was living in my aunt’s garage. After years of hard work, sacrifice, and an abundance of help my mom was able to find a home for us to live in. Not a garage or spare bedroom, an actual home. Unfortunately this did not last long. Our home was so old and run down that it had to be demolished. So once again, we moved into the house of a family member. Although I did not realize it at the time of these difficulties, it would have been next to impossible for my mom to support us all by herself. Through every difficulty, there was always somebody there to make sure that we made it through.
By the time I was in high school the idea of helping those less fortunate was deeply ingrained into my belief system. This was partly due to the fact that my mom would ensure that we were grateful for everything we got, no matter how small or insignificant it seemed. Mostly though, I realized the importance of helping others because of my personal experiences and how life changing it can be for people who truly need it. Around my sophomore year in high school I joined a mentorship program (that I had previously been a student of) which focused on teaching junior high kids good values as well as helping them through personal problems. This helped to reinforce my own values and served as a starting point for my journey towards helping others and making a difference. Eventually I graduated high school and began college with the belief that I knew what I wanted to do with my life. I thought to myself that I would transfer to a good school and get a business degree. With this business degree I would make a lot of money so that I would never have to struggle to take care of my family like my mom had to. It was not until I joined a unique organization that I realized my life aspirations should be greater than what they originally were.
This organization was called Students for Social Justice and it focused on discussing issues relevant to helping the local community and implementing plans of action for its members to make a difference. I even attended an ACLU conference in Sacramento, CA where I was able to talk to a lawyer whose focus was pro-bono work for people who couldn’t afford attorney fees. By the end of that year, after participating in several community service projects and talking with my professors, I realized that I did not want my life’s focus to just be making money and living comfortably. From then on I knew that I wanted a big part of my life to be helping those who are less fortunate. It didn’t come to me at first, but eventually I realized that one of the most effective ways to go about doing this is by having the knowledge and ability to affect law. Naturally, this is what prompted me to want to become a lawyer. The idea of helping others and standing up for those who couldn’t stand up for themselves is the unique perspective that I carry with me now.
As a potential law school student I know that my strong motivation to succeed will help me succeed and overcome any challenges that I face. Living through these experiences and witnessing first-hand the importance of helping others is what has pushed me to this point in my life. Every time I think of giving up I remember all the hard work and sacrifice that has gone into getting myself to where I am now. It is what drives me to do the best that I can in everything I do and to become as educated as I can to make the biggest impact possible. I know that making a difference and affecting policies regarding social welfare can take years of hard work achieve, but it all starts here. It all begins with the desire to make change happen and taking the correct steps towards that. This may just be my first step, but I know with absolute certainty that it is the right one.
Personal Statement
Put bluntly, growing up was not easy for me. I spent my early childhood living in a troubled neighborhood where people would literally get shot for hanging around with the wrong crowd, where kids as young as 11 were being initiated into gangs (usually involving physical or sexual violence), and where aspirations for life were about as low as they get. Although the majority of my childhood wasn’t spent in that neighborhood, that is where my story began. Eventually my family moved away from Los Angeles and up to central California where there were a lot of relatives. I remember having to move from one family member’s house to another. At one point my entire immediate family, all six of us, was living in my aunt’s garage. After years of hard work, sacrifice, and an abundance of help my mom was able to find a home for us to live in. Not a garage or spare bedroom, an actual home. Unfortunately this did not last long. Our home was so old and run down that it had to be demolished. So once again, we moved into the house of a family member. Although I did not realize it at the time of these difficulties, it would have been next to impossible for my mom to support us all by herself. Through every difficulty, there was always somebody there to make sure that we made it through.
By the time I was in high school the idea of helping those less fortunate was deeply ingrained into my belief system. This was partly due to the fact that my mom would ensure that we were grateful for everything we got, no matter how small or insignificant it seemed. Mostly though, I realized the importance of helping others because of my personal experiences and how life changing it can be for people who truly need it. Around my sophomore year in high school I joined a mentorship program (that I had previously been a student of) which focused on teaching junior high kids good values as well as helping them through personal problems. This helped to reinforce my own values and served as a starting point for my journey towards helping others and making a difference. Eventually I graduated high school and began college with the belief that I knew what I wanted to do with my life. I thought to myself that I would transfer to a good school and get a business degree. With this business degree I would make a lot of money so that I would never have to struggle to take care of my family like my mom had to. It was not until I joined a unique organization that I realized my life aspirations should be greater than what they originally were.
This organization was called Students for Social Justice and it focused on discussing issues relevant to helping the local community and implementing plans of action for its members to make a difference. I even attended an ACLU conference in Sacramento, CA where I was able to talk to a lawyer whose focus was pro-bono work for people who couldn’t afford attorney fees. By the end of that year, after participating in several community service projects and talking with my professors, I realized that I did not want my life’s focus to just be making money and living comfortably. From then on I knew that I wanted a big part of my life to be helping those who are less fortunate. It didn’t come to me at first, but eventually I realized that one of the most effective ways to go about doing this is by having the knowledge and ability to affect law. Naturally, this is what prompted me to want to become a lawyer. The idea of helping others and standing up for those who couldn’t stand up for themselves is the unique perspective that I carry with me now.
As a potential law school student I know that my strong motivation to succeed will help me succeed and overcome any challenges that I face. Living through these experiences and witnessing first-hand the importance of helping others is what has pushed me to this point in my life. Every time I think of giving up I remember all the hard work and sacrifice that has gone into getting myself to where I am now. It is what drives me to do the best that I can in everything I do and to become as educated as I can to make the biggest impact possible. I know that making a difference and affecting policies regarding social welfare can take years of hard work achieve, but it all starts here. It all begins with the desire to make change happen and taking the correct steps towards that. This may just be my first step, but I know with absolute certainty that it is the right one.