Addendum, additional PS or no explanation
Posted: Thu Dec 15, 2011 11:26 pm
I applied to Santa Clara Law School for Fall 2008 and was rejected. For the last three years I’ve been through abusive marriage, lost all my friends in US, basically was not allowed to leave the house without my husband, who’s extremely jealous and paranoid. It didn’t happen overnight, I , I still cannot fully understand how it turned out this way.
Anyways, I finally filed for divorce this fall after the female friend from my home country came to visit me. She was totally terrified with the situation and after she left she started bombarding me with emails, trying to persuade me to leave my husband. She said: “At the age of thirty you don’t have any job, no career, no friends, no future, and no backup plan”.
I decided to retake LSAT, got 159, which was 4 points higher than the previous score. I would like to give it a shot, and apply to SCU once more. I have my old PS, which I really worked hard on, and I would like to only edit it a bit. However, it sounds so enthusiastic, and totally contradicts my current resume. I haven’t been employed for the last two years, and I have zero accomplishments to show, except, maybe passing notary public exam, which I didn’t need, my husband wanted me as a notary for his business.
So I wrote to the counselor of SCU, saying “I have to explain why not so many things have happened to me during last three years. I’ve been through an abusive marriage. What I am concerned about is that it’s not possible to put it in 10-15 lines if I write an addendum, and it’s hard, although may be possible, to incorporate this part into my PS. The reason why I prefer not to write about it in my PS is that PS is not supposed to be about justification or explanation of bad life choices. My soon-to-be over marriage was neither an accomplishment nor something I feel guilty of; it’s something I would like to forget. However, I firmly believe that this issue has to be addressed in some shape of way”.
The counselor replied to me that she didn’t understand why that issue had to be addressed. She said “Did being in this marriage motivate you to seek a law degree? This is something you would want to include in a personal statement. Or did it adversely impact your undergraduate GPA? Addendums usually address these types of issues. In deciding whether or not address this issue, ask yourself how you hope the admissions committee will use information about your abusive relationship”.
Now I am totally confused.
I don’t want the committee to be sorry for me, I am not planning to whine and complain. Nevertheless, it is a true reason, and I am just trying to jumpstart my life from the scratch. I don’t have much time left to apply, since I would like to finish my application process before December test takers get their score.
Any thoughts? My letters of recommendation are outdated as well, and if I allow LSDAS send them, I’m afraid it will do more harm than good (unless I lie and fake some experience).
Right now I don’t have a single person to talk to, no relatives and no friends, please, don’t judge me hard.
Anyways, I finally filed for divorce this fall after the female friend from my home country came to visit me. She was totally terrified with the situation and after she left she started bombarding me with emails, trying to persuade me to leave my husband. She said: “At the age of thirty you don’t have any job, no career, no friends, no future, and no backup plan”.
I decided to retake LSAT, got 159, which was 4 points higher than the previous score. I would like to give it a shot, and apply to SCU once more. I have my old PS, which I really worked hard on, and I would like to only edit it a bit. However, it sounds so enthusiastic, and totally contradicts my current resume. I haven’t been employed for the last two years, and I have zero accomplishments to show, except, maybe passing notary public exam, which I didn’t need, my husband wanted me as a notary for his business.
So I wrote to the counselor of SCU, saying “I have to explain why not so many things have happened to me during last three years. I’ve been through an abusive marriage. What I am concerned about is that it’s not possible to put it in 10-15 lines if I write an addendum, and it’s hard, although may be possible, to incorporate this part into my PS. The reason why I prefer not to write about it in my PS is that PS is not supposed to be about justification or explanation of bad life choices. My soon-to-be over marriage was neither an accomplishment nor something I feel guilty of; it’s something I would like to forget. However, I firmly believe that this issue has to be addressed in some shape of way”.
The counselor replied to me that she didn’t understand why that issue had to be addressed. She said “Did being in this marriage motivate you to seek a law degree? This is something you would want to include in a personal statement. Or did it adversely impact your undergraduate GPA? Addendums usually address these types of issues. In deciding whether or not address this issue, ask yourself how you hope the admissions committee will use information about your abusive relationship”.
Now I am totally confused.
Any thoughts? My letters of recommendation are outdated as well, and if I allow LSDAS send them, I’m afraid it will do more harm than good (unless I lie and fake some experience).
Right now I don’t have a single person to talk to, no relatives and no friends, please, don’t judge me hard.