Personal Statement Review? Forum

(Personal Statement Examples, Advice, Critique, . . . )
Post Reply
getmads

New
Posts: 1
Joined: Tue Jan 05, 2016 11:11 pm

Personal Statement Review?

Post by getmads » Tue Jan 05, 2016 11:15 pm

I'm in a tough spot because I just rewrote my entire personal statement days before I'm about to submit my applications. So any help with proofreading or content is appreciated. Happy application season!

------------------------

This was the moment of truth. We were down by one run in the bottom of the seventh inning of the championship game, and it all came down to me. I grabbed my bat, sauntered up to home plate with an all-too-familiar air of feigned confidence, and glared at the pitcher. She studied my demeanor: how closely I stood to the plate, the angle of my elbows, how high I carried my bat. And then, from all the information attained in those brief moments, she threw me a deliberate, carefully personalized pitch. It was an ambiguous but definite strike, slightly high in the zone, and very close to my body. The ball and bat struck each other at precisely the angle to propel it into the air directly above the shortstop. In a total of sixteen seconds both the play and the game were concluded in a heartbreaking loss. Seven years later, I still remember that painful stagger back to the dugout.
When that game occurred, I was the tender age of fourteen. If you knew me today, you would know that I possess fierce ambition coupled with a genuine comfort in who I am. When I was fourteen, however, such a strong sense of self was unimaginable to me. I was insecure and nervous. I criticized myself in a way that my team or coach never would. In my eyes, I was the sole reason that my team lost the aforementioned championship game. I held that belief closely, and it lingered in my mind every time I stepped foot onto the field. When I was fourteen, every loss steadily nagged me to give up and accept defeat.
Nonetheless, I carried on. I began to push myself harder than I ever had, and dedicated myself to never experiencing that sense of self-disappointment again. The batting cages became my second home, I scrutinized my technique down to the position of my knuckles when I gripped the bat, and I learned how to mentally prepare myself for the intense pressure that accompanies the game of softball. With each passing year, my skills developed and my confidence matured.
I’ve come to understand that my academic career is a lot like softball. I often compare my freshman year of college to that championship game; my failures from that year nearly broke me in the most fundamental way that a person can break. Yet, similar to my response seven years prior, I picked myself up and committed myself wholeheartedly to fulfilling my long term goal of becoming an attorney. I vowed to never experience a failure like that again, and my dedication was palpable throughout the rest of college.
Let me say, the mere fact that I’m currently writing this statement to you is remarkable. To me, this essay is a physical manifestation of every hour I spent studying, every internship I applied for, every success I experienced throughout my academic and personal life. It is also a manifestation of the failures I endured during that first year of college. My desire to be an attorney is what fueled my dedication. The prospect of a career in law gave me the necessary kickstart I needed to overcome that failure. Still, whenever I was faced with the menacing “why do you want to be a lawyer” inquiry, my answer rested solely upon a general passion.
My answer began to change when I interned for a young attorney who singlehandedly managed her own employment discrimination law firm during the summer between my sophomore and junior year of college. Between the long hours spent bate-stamping documents, the research I performed to help relieve our clients, and the drawn-out mediations we attended, I discovered what it meant to be an attorney. I was intoxicated with both the mundane and the thrilling aspects of the legal system. It was in that period of time when I understood precisely why I wanted to be an attorney. I saw this revelation as a success that only my preceding failure could have lead me to.
The journey to becoming a champion softball player is incredibly similar to the journey to becoming a lawyer. We choose to discuss, almost exclusively, the successes of these journeys. Yet it’s so crucial to acknowledge the failures that often come before our successes, for our failures are what shape us into the individuals we are today. I truly believe that every defeat I previously endured was necessary in my quest to become an attorney. I look forward materializing these lessons into a successful career in both law school and beyond.

User avatar
cbbinnyc

Bronze
Posts: 375
Joined: Sat Mar 21, 2015 12:49 am

Re: Personal Statement Review?

Post by cbbinnyc » Tue Jan 05, 2016 11:49 pm

You might want to reconsider that timeframe for submission. This statement needs a complete reworking.

There are a lot of issues, but the bottom line is that discussing softball is a bad idea. In general, it's not a good idea to discuss pre-college activities or sports, and here you are doing both. The sports discussion falls right into the usual sports cliches: I lost the game, but then I hit the cages, did an 80s montage, and accomplished my goals. Unless you have something very insightful or unique to say about your relationship with sports or played sports at a very high level (Div I, professional, etc ... and maybe even then) it's not a good subject and not a compelling central metaphor.

Find a specific story to focus on from college or post-college. Maybe focus specifically on memorable experiences at your law firm internship. Maybe discuss your freshman year difficulties in more details. Etc etc. Hold off on submitting until you have a solid statement.

User avatar
gastronomy

Bronze
Posts: 235
Joined: Thu Nov 19, 2015 4:51 pm

Re: Personal Statement Review?

Post by gastronomy » Wed Jan 06, 2016 5:06 am

.

Post Reply

Return to “Law School Personal Statements”