recently im addicted in meringue cookies! 🤩
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recently im addicted in meringue cookies! 🤩
hello! ive been trying to write essays and from the essays ive read, the pattern seems to be that it starts with an anecdote or a subject, then transitions to a bigger idea like how its changed you or smth like that (i hope that makes sense). i have some topics and stories in mind but i cant figure out how to turn from talking about the topic to talking about how it reflects my personality as an applicant. any tips on how to make that transition ?? thanks !
Are we talking Common App essay? Ignore the pattern. The pattern is what’ll get you rejected. Transitions like that get your application sent straight to the nothing-special-about-this-one pile unless your parents founded something important and you cured Alzheimer’s when you were three.
Instead of trying to transition from an anecdote to a bigger picture something or other, tell a story, and infuse your narrative with an awareness of its greater role in your life. But whatever you do, don’t think of your essay in chunks. You are not chunks. You have a personality that shapes and is shaped by the events that occur in your life. Why would you try to distinguish the two when they’re so inextricably intertwined?
If you feel like your essay isn’t “deep” or “meaningful” that’s probably a good thing. People thinking their essays are “deep” generally leads to a decrease in writing quality, as they often get so distracted by the ~greater message~ that they fail to acknowledge the necessity of solid prose. Don’t write a story that you think makes you seem deep. Don’t write a story that makes you seem somehow profound. Just write a story. Write it well. Infuse it with your voice. That’s how it reflects your personality as an applicant. There is no transition; there’s just you.
studyblr favorites
Hi all, here’s a list of different supplies that I have thoroughly enjoyed. If any of you guys are looking for recommendations (as an early back-to-school post), here’s one:
highlighter
Sharpie highlighters (capped / retractable)
I tried the gel variation, but honestly they are not my favorite. They have a tendency to transfer to the page touching the gel highlighted areas and can get messy very easily.
Zebra Mildliners
This is one of those luxury items; whereas it’s nice to have them and I do love mine, they aren’t a necessity.
pen case
Kipling 100 pens case
Again, this is a luxury that I enjoy but I cannot justify paying full price (the color I selected was cheaper at the time). Wait for a sale or buy a duplicate (like this one!)
pens
Gelly Roll Stardust
These are great for writing titles or headers!
Stabilo set of 20
I prefer my Staedtler over these, BUT the case for this is so much better, and these are slightly cheaper.
Staedtler fineliners (20 colors / 36 colors)
Signo 0.38
MUJI 0.38 (black / 10 colors)
pencils
Paper Mate Clearpoint
Paper Mate Sharpwriter
planner
Molang diaries (did a whole review here!)
Printable planners if you’re more into that
playlists
My SoundCloud
My Spotify
Spotify’s intense studying playlist
feel free to share this and contribute!
"I'm Studying..." Tag
Hey guys ! I thought it’d be interesting to get a thing going around tumblr where we share our recent studies (in class or independent) and specify the last topic/text you covered in the class. I’ll begin.
Subject #1: Latin (AP) : Review Project on De Bello Gallico + the Aeneid Subject # 2: French (AP) : Huis Clos by Jean-Paul Satre Subject # 3: English Language Arts : Macbeth by Shakespeare Subject # 4: Precalculus (BC) : Derivatives of Inverse Trigonometric Functions Subject #5: Chemistry (AP) : Self-Designed Experiment on the Effectiveness of SPF of Spray vs. Lotion Sunscreen Subject # 6: Visual Arts : Monochromatic Painting (Realistic Shading + Blending Practice) Subject # 7: Spanish : Reflexive Pronouns Subject # 8: Arabic : Food & Drink
Got accepted to my dream school!!! All the work pays off, pals 💖
Its soooo hard to study after working.
But i will do my best with my fav melon milk 🍈🥛
yeah im ready to study
with strawberry meringue cookies and greentea scoop cookie 🤭❤️
Hey there, I just had a question about your post on reddit. I was just finding it a bit difficult to differentiate from "waxing" and showing passion in an essay. Could you help me out or give an example or two? Thanks so much for the post by the way, I think it'll be really helpful! :)
Not sure which post you’re referring to, sorry! Any chance you could send me a link?
I’m guessing you’re referring to “waxing” as in “waxing poetic” or “waxing philosophical”? In college essays it’s super easy to do either, so forgive me if I’m wrong :’)
“Waxing” means getting progressively more and more something. So in the case of “waxing poetic,” it means your writing is getting more and more poetic as the piece progresses, and in the case of “waxing philosophical,” it means your writing is getting more and more philosophical. This alone can be totally fine, but the trap that many college applicants fall into is thinking that flowery language and/or large-scale conjectures will make them seem more impressive.
Consider the well-worn “I experienced a new culture and am now a Changed Person™” essay. First of all, don’t write this. It’s overdone and hard to do well. But for the sake of this post, let’s say you’re writing an essay like this. What I’ve seen time and time again in this type of essay is a combination of the following: 1) the author waxes poetic as they describe details of a foreign culture, and 2) the author waxes philosophical about the importance of understanding other cultures and having a broader worldview and concludes the essay with what they believe to be some profound moral.
Now, it’s totally fine to appreciate another culture, and it’s great if your experience with another culture helped you grow as a person, but this isn’t the way to write about it. Waxing poetic in this context introduces an atmosphere of perceived exoticism; waxing philosophical pushes the essay away from personal experience and almost always comes off as pretentious and/or naive. Neither But let’s say you’re genuinely passionate about your time and work abroad, and you think it shaped some part of who you are today. How do you handle that?
Instead of waxing philosophical, you have two options: either stick to your own personal experiences completely, or include philosophical elements within the context of your own narrative. Basically, talk about your thoughts with the acknowledgment that they are your thoughts rather than absolute truths.
Consider:
“We need to be tolerant of cultures that differ from our own if we ever hope to achieve a sustainable global political environment.” (waxing)
vs
“So I confronted my bias. I looked myself in the mirror and said ‘hey, maybe you’re part of the problem.’” (personal experiences)
or
“I’m curious, now, about the role of cross-cultural misinformation in larger-scale political issues. How do misunderstandings like my own play out across communities, across continents?” (personal thoughts)
An admissions officer wants to know about you. This is no secret. They don’t want to learn about How To Achieve World Peace when they’re reading your essay; they want to learn why you deserve an acceptance letter. Pretty much the only reason people make generic, sweeping claims like the first example above (aside from having less access to quality college counseling!) is that they think they’re saying something profound. Maybe you do have something profound to say. But the admissions officer doesn’t care right now, and so the personal essay is not the place to do so.
TL;DR you can avoid sounding preachy or pretentious by talking about yourself rather than making sweeping statements.
Waxing poetic is less of a problem as long as you do it appropriately. Avoid excessive flowery language - more words doesn’t necessarily mean better writing - and be aware of how your use of a more poetic style in certain parts of the piece impacts how it comes across. Hint: read your writing aloud to yourself. This helps a bunch with cutting down the excessively flowery language and is even something professional writers do to work out problem spots in their pieces.
Hope this helped, and as always hmu if you have any more questions!