50 Successful Harvard Application Essays
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150 successful harvard application essays
J
USTINE L IU When I was a child, I begged my parents for my very own Brother PT-1400 P-Touch Handheld Label Maker to fulfill all of my labeling needs. Other kids had Nintendos and would spend their free time with Mario and Luigi. While they pummeled their video game controllers furiously, the pads of their thumbs dancing across their joysticks, I would type out labels on my industrial-standard P-Touch with just as much zeal. I labeled everything imaginable, dividing hundreds of pens into Ziploc bags by color, then rubber-banding them by point size. The finishing touch, of course, was always a glossy, three-eighths-inch-wide tag, freshly churned out from my handheld labeler and decisively pasted upon the numerous plastic bags I had successfully compiled. Labeling became therapeutic for me; organizing my surroundings into specific groups to be labeled provides me with a sense of stability. I may not physically need the shiny color-coded label verifying the contents of a plastic bag as BLUE HIGHLIGHTERS—FAT , to identify them as such, but seeing these classifications so plainly allows me to appreciate the reliability of my categorizations. There are no exceptions when I label the top ledge of my bookshelf as containing works from ACHEBE, CHINUA TO CONRAD, JOSEPH . Each book is either filtered into that category or placed definitively into another one. Yet, such consistency only exists in these inanimate objects. Thus, the break in my role as a labeler comes when I interact with people. Their lives are too complicated, their personalities too intricate for me to resolutely summarize in a few words or even with the 26.2 feet of laminated adhesive tape compatible with my label maker. I have learned that a thin line exists between labeling and just being judgmental when evaluating individuals. I can hardly superficially characterize others as simply as I do my material possessions because people refuse to be so cleanly separated and compartmentalized. My sister Joyce jokes freely and talks with me for hours about everything from the disturbing popularity of vampires in pop culture to cubic watermelons, yet those who don’t know her well usually think of her as timid and introverted. My mother is sometimes my biggest supporter, spouting words of encouragement and, at other instances, my most unrelenting critic. The overlap becomes too indistinct, the contradictions too apparent, even as I attempt to classify those people in the world whom I know best. Neither would I want others to be predictable enough for me to label. The real joy in human interaction lies in the excitement of the unknown. Overturning expectations can be necessary to preserving the vitality of relationships. If I were never surprised by the behaviors of those around me, my biggest source of entertainment would vanish. For all my love of order when it comes to my room, I don’t want myself, or the people with whom I interact, to fit squarely into any one category. I meticulously follow directions to the millimeter in the chemistry lab but measure ingredients by pinches and dashes in the comfort of my kitchen. I’m a self-proclaimed grammar Nazi, but I’ll admit e. e. cummings’s irreverence does appeal. I’ll chart my television show schedule on Excel, but I would never dream of confronting my chores with as much organization. I even call myself a labeler, but not when it comes to people. As Walt Whitman might put it, “Do I contradict myself? / Very well, then I contradict myself, / (I am large, I contain multitudes.).” I therefore refrain from the temptation to label—despite it being an act that makes me feel so fulfilled when applied to physical objects—when real people are the subjects. The consequences of premature labeling are too great, the risk of inaccuracy too high because, most of the time, not even the hundreds of alphanumeric digits and symbols available for entry on my P-Touch can effectively describe who an individual really is. REVIEW The first thing that jumps out about this essay is the topic. While other college applicants might offer their profound thoughts on life, love, and the human condition, Justine begins with a slightly less sexy topic: labeling stuff. She readily admits that it’s a bit of an eccentric hobby; as she says in her essay, label makers are to her what video game consoles are to much of the rest of the teenage demographic. The unorthodoxy of it, though, is precisely what makes it so captivating. The essay draws the reader in with a topic that, at a very minimum, is intriguing. This immediately puts Justine, the writer, in the incredibly advantageous position of having a story that people actually want to read. Complementing her distinctive choice of topic, Justine has an infectiously quirky style that truly shines through in her writing. Her vocabulary is sprinkled with little idiosyncrasies, making it easy to imagine her as a child as she “decisively pasted” labels onto “successfully compiled” bags, proudly basking in her triumphant success. Justine’s use of specific, geeky details is quite endearing, a kind of lightheartedness that makes a reader laugh just a little bit inside while following along. As she describes her Brother PT-1400 P-Touch Handheld Label Maker, the 26.2 feet of label-maker tape, or her bag of “Blue Highlighters—Fat,” readers get a powerful sense of her youthful enthusiasm for labeling. Her subsequent shift from labeling as hobby to labeling as stereotyping—while an attempt to provide some additional substance to the essay—is less memorable. While her anecdotes about her labeling hobby are original and refreshing, her discussion of labeling people feels a bit trite. She essentially observes that labeling people is wrong because people are not one-dimensional, a well- worn platitude. It was a safe choice. But was it the best? Instead, Justine could have improved her essay by focusing on what makes her stand out, namely her creative, quirky personality. After all, a successful college essay needs not to draw any deep philosophical conclusions about the world—its main purpose is simply to bring the writer ’s unique voice to life. Nevertheless, Justine does a terrific job expressing herself as an individual, infusing her essay and her application as a whole with a warm and distinct personality. —Victor C. Wu |
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