law school personal statement (please critique)
Posted: Tue Jun 16, 2015 8:41 am
This my starting rough draft, be as brutally honest as you can. Thank You.
"That will never happen to me." Is what I thought when I would hear about rapes in the news and on social media. I always promised myself that I would never get too drunk or wear inappropriate clothing or too revealing clothing. I thought my twisted view of thinking would protect me from getting sexually assaulted. I was very wrong. In March of 2012, at the age of twenty-one, I was sexually assaulted. And, for those next few months afterwards I definitely struggled.
While a woman is dealing the affects and the anguish of the unlawful act of rape her first natural instinct is to withdraw herself from the world. For the first few weeks after the spring semester of my junior year I did that. I thought my whole life was over and that I should just give up and not return and finish school because there was no way you can face the sight of people again. It was during that time period that I made the not so smart decision to withdraw from all of my courses I registered for for fall semester of my senior year.
After a few weeks of throwing myself a pity party, I decided to stop feeling sorry for myself and make the most of this semester away from school. I began contacting local law offices asking can I do a short term internship until I return to school. I interned at a local divorce and bankruptcy law firm.
When I returned to Georgia State University I felt as if I had this new fire that was lit up under me. Yes, something really horrible and tragic happened to me, but life goes on and we have to try to make the best of any situation that we are dealt. That spring semester of my senior year I jumped back in with both feet. I felt renewed, like I got the chance to start over again. My last three semesters at Georgia State University turned out to be some of the very best semesters I did academically well.
This sexual assault has had a profound impact of my life. There is not a day that goes by that it has not has some type of effect on my way of life. Being sexual assaulted has definitely made me a stronger, confident person. It has also change my twisted view of what I thought rape was. No, you do not have to be dressed a certain way nor do you have to be in a certain state of mind to be raped.
I am no longer a “victim” of what happened to me. Yes, what happened to be was a tragic and horrendous thing, but I have the strength and the will to not let it define me. By no means am I downplaying rape or how I struggled in the past to get past it, but at some point on the road to recovery you have to make a choice between being a victim and being a survivor. I choose to be a survivor.