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Any comments would be very appreciated! Please be VERY critical, be mean! I need all the analysis I can get to make this essay not sound so cliche and awkward!
Write an essay in which you tell us about someone who has made an impact on your life and explain how and why this person is important to you.
For many, finding a person that has a significant impact on one's life may take years before they fully understand the magnitude of that person's influence. Years of taking the little things that person does for granted, years of persistent abuse endured by that person, years of naivete and growth on my part that ultimately allowed me to reflect on my life as I contemplate myself in the world as I prepare to enter the "real world". To really assess how my Mom has shaped me into the person I am today, and how her influence will guide me throughout the rest of my life.
Choosing to leave her impoverished life back in Vietnam, leaving her family, customs, and life behind for an opportunity to find a life in America, an idea so far fetched by many due to the fact that entire hordes of Vietnamese refugees were fleeing Vietnam in fear of the tightening grip the communist had been exerting on the quickly diminishing Vietnamese morale, an idea with little fuel to flame, an idea that played against the odds of things working out for her, a single being in a sea of lost hope and opportunity showed me how much she cared about me even before I was even born. Thrust into the vicious world known as public school, my hunger for success and recognition was hindered by the fact that I was such an awkward and shy child. I remember times when I would lay my head down on the desk after recess, in elementary school, and dread going home where I knew hours of reading to fill reading logs would consume me entirely, not knowing that this built the foundation to my education.The hours of reading "recommended" books for my grade level, along with the extra tutoring at Kumon really taught me that education came before anything else. In middle school I was able to interact with my peers more because we grew up together up through elementary school, we all knew each other and we were all able to participate in various outside of school activities together, it was the first time in my life where I could "hang out" with people other then my family members. A time where I began to take my mom for granted, the countless hours of dragging me from soccer practices, to birthday parties, and back home. A time where I began to allow my frustration boil over when I was asked to do my homework, the nagging my mom persistently barraged me with forced the ignorance in me to take over my life and become stuck up and self-centered. The excitement and anticipation of spending my time in high school with my buddies that I've known for 7-8 years died a quick death when I learned that I would be attending a different high school the day before school started. I spent my freshmen year in a shell, afraid of everybody around me, afraid to leave my mark on the world. It wasn't until my junior year during a hiking trip at Lost Maples, surrounded by waving fields of Auburn laced trees, a place where my mind was content to wander through the burnt orange and gold stricken leaves, a place where I realized how foolish I had been, being so anti-social, and being content with my lack of drive to change my attitude. I realized that my mom had come to America from an entirely different world, went through high school with vernacular disadvantages, graduated college with the odds against her, got a good paying job as a pharmacist, and raised a family of three high maintenance children with every possible obstacle hindering her. Who was I to waste my opportunity of success at the expense of my mom because I was too scared to stand up, to feed my hunger for recognition, to make a name for myself? Who was I to disappoint my mom, the woman who had set up everything for me to be all I could in my life, only to be wasted away because I was content with being another face in a sea of mediocrity?
The woman who had taught me to respect others, the woman who taught me my morals, the woman who taught me the prayers I pray at night, the woman who moved halfway across the world for an opportunity to find the best quality of life for her and her future was the woman who I could count on to give me a meal at dinner time, the woman that I could count on to give me a ride home from orchestra rehearsal, the woman that I couldn't stand to disappoint any longer. As I transition from high school to college this opportunity has allowed me to understand how important my mom is to me, no matter how cliche that is. Through the trying times and adversity my mom was still able to "suck the marrow out of life", a thing that I hope to do when I'm all said and done.
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