Personal Statement Final Critique
Posted: Sat Sep 05, 2015 1:20 pm
Let me know what you guys think of this before I put it in my apps.
For most of my life, I lacked a clear career path, and I compensated by alternating between hosts of different potential career paths, ranging from business, to engineering to medicine. However, while I did not necessarily realize it in 2010, my personal, emotional and intellectual worldview was changed by the events in Madison, Wisconsin in the summer of 2012 before college. On November 2, 2010, a new governor was elected in Wisconsin, the state where my family and I currently live. I was not very involved in politics at the time, nor was I for the first several weeks of his governorship. However, like many others in my community and around the state, I was concerned with a series of legislative acts proposed by our state government, including nearly $2 billion in income and property tax cuts, and substantial reductions in public worker pensions, health insurance and collective bargaining rights. I felt like the living standards and rights of ordinary workers - people in my family, my friends, honest people who have lived in my community for generations - were being threatened by these proposed budget cuts, which piqued my newfound interest in politics due to my own first-hand knowledge of those affected by it.
My interest and involvement in politics did not change all at once. At first, I started to get involved in small ways. I had conversations with my fellow students, I followed the debates and the protests on the news, and I shared my opinions on social media accounts. However, in the Summer of 2012, I was given the opportunity to volunteer as an election surveyor for the statewide recall election of our governor. Finally, I was given the chance to put forth my own hard-work and organizational abilities to the test-the chance to learn and operate within the state government branch to continue to improve the system, and make better for we, the people. I have no doubt that the two months I spent volunteering during the election campaign for governor of Wisconsin, inspired my desire to become a lawyer today. I spent countless hours contacting local constituents to identify their preferred candidate for governor and fighting to gain as many converts as possible. On a daily basis, I engaged in countless conversations with Democrats, Republicans, Independents, and the vast numbers of politically-apathetic. It was a tough, thankless job, but also truly enlivening due to the amount of knowledge I learned about the political process, and working to effect grassroots change, literally person-by-person, ensuring social justice was being fought for. Throughout this opportunity, I grew so much professionally, as well as academically and socially. My communication skills were tested and honed over the course of hundreds of hours speaking on the phone. The ability to persuade a neutral party to accept one’s view is valued in all sectors of life, but especially cherished in the legal profession. I discovered that I not only enjoy debating, but actually thrive on it. To begin a phone conversation with an undecided voter, and then end with a new supporter was truly exhilarating. I imagine there is no greater comparison than the experience of winning a hard-fought court case.
Furthermore, these conversations made me aware of the wider world, and the need to unite to defend the values of people from all backgrounds. I was drawn deeper and deeper into social justice work throughout my college career while volunteering at the Family Court Clinic at the UW Law School, where we operated as a free legal advice clinic to clientele of any background. I assisted various clients, most of whom had no access to a lawyer, or legal aid. I have come to realize the importance of politics and law on individual people, as well as society as whole. I know that I want to be a lawyer who does more than squabble over corporate minutia; I want to use my strong analytical skills, honed by my experience in the political system, to help benefit anyone in the United States, regardless of their background or race, so they have an opportunity to fight for their own rights. While my path to law school is unconventional, I believe that its very uniqueness is the source of my strength and my worthiness as a candidate.
For most of my life, I lacked a clear career path, and I compensated by alternating between hosts of different potential career paths, ranging from business, to engineering to medicine. However, while I did not necessarily realize it in 2010, my personal, emotional and intellectual worldview was changed by the events in Madison, Wisconsin in the summer of 2012 before college. On November 2, 2010, a new governor was elected in Wisconsin, the state where my family and I currently live. I was not very involved in politics at the time, nor was I for the first several weeks of his governorship. However, like many others in my community and around the state, I was concerned with a series of legislative acts proposed by our state government, including nearly $2 billion in income and property tax cuts, and substantial reductions in public worker pensions, health insurance and collective bargaining rights. I felt like the living standards and rights of ordinary workers - people in my family, my friends, honest people who have lived in my community for generations - were being threatened by these proposed budget cuts, which piqued my newfound interest in politics due to my own first-hand knowledge of those affected by it.
My interest and involvement in politics did not change all at once. At first, I started to get involved in small ways. I had conversations with my fellow students, I followed the debates and the protests on the news, and I shared my opinions on social media accounts. However, in the Summer of 2012, I was given the opportunity to volunteer as an election surveyor for the statewide recall election of our governor. Finally, I was given the chance to put forth my own hard-work and organizational abilities to the test-the chance to learn and operate within the state government branch to continue to improve the system, and make better for we, the people. I have no doubt that the two months I spent volunteering during the election campaign for governor of Wisconsin, inspired my desire to become a lawyer today. I spent countless hours contacting local constituents to identify their preferred candidate for governor and fighting to gain as many converts as possible. On a daily basis, I engaged in countless conversations with Democrats, Republicans, Independents, and the vast numbers of politically-apathetic. It was a tough, thankless job, but also truly enlivening due to the amount of knowledge I learned about the political process, and working to effect grassroots change, literally person-by-person, ensuring social justice was being fought for. Throughout this opportunity, I grew so much professionally, as well as academically and socially. My communication skills were tested and honed over the course of hundreds of hours speaking on the phone. The ability to persuade a neutral party to accept one’s view is valued in all sectors of life, but especially cherished in the legal profession. I discovered that I not only enjoy debating, but actually thrive on it. To begin a phone conversation with an undecided voter, and then end with a new supporter was truly exhilarating. I imagine there is no greater comparison than the experience of winning a hard-fought court case.
Furthermore, these conversations made me aware of the wider world, and the need to unite to defend the values of people from all backgrounds. I was drawn deeper and deeper into social justice work throughout my college career while volunteering at the Family Court Clinic at the UW Law School, where we operated as a free legal advice clinic to clientele of any background. I assisted various clients, most of whom had no access to a lawyer, or legal aid. I have come to realize the importance of politics and law on individual people, as well as society as whole. I know that I want to be a lawyer who does more than squabble over corporate minutia; I want to use my strong analytical skills, honed by my experience in the political system, to help benefit anyone in the United States, regardless of their background or race, so they have an opportunity to fight for their own rights. While my path to law school is unconventional, I believe that its very uniqueness is the source of my strength and my worthiness as a candidate.