Thursday, August 13, 2020
Having Survived Rejection (guest post)
Having Survived Rejection (guest post) This is a guest post by someoneMichael T. (UMD 19)whose college essays I helped edit last year. Hes a friend of a friend who wrote an entire essay about soldering. Like many of you, he worked toward MIT with a singleminded devotion and believed he would belong here more than anywhere else, but then he was not admitted to the class of 2019. Heres his story. MIT decisions came out yesterday, and for those who spent all day waiting (and anyone else going through college admissions), this is for you. It was December 13th, 2014 6:15PM. I remember eyeing my box of yogurt covered raisins, knowing that it may be my only comfort come 6:28PM, when the MIT early decision would be released. I ate all of them. They didnât help. Iâd always thought that I was the perfect fit for MIT, being the tinkerer/builder type who had a passion for creation. I wore around my MIT swag around proudly as if I were its representative. My brother, my cousin, and my best friend all made it in, so it was my turn to follow suit. Come application time, I studied the admissions blog religiously. I learned how to write about myself, how to create the froyo flavor that represented me. Then, I forged those essays out of myself. Never before had I put so much work into an essay, going through revision after revision until I was satisfied. Naturally, I submitted a minute before the deadline (itâs traditional). Then, as I waited those three months, my infatuation grew into an obsession. I learned more and more about this place where I felt I was meant to go, imagining how Iâd install a WiFi enabled LED Matrix on my dorm door, how Iâd bring my cooking to my friends. It was a setup for heartbreak. What bothered me the most was that I wasnât even deferred, simply rejected. It didnât feel real. How did this happen? How had this moment that I envisioned for so long ended like this? I felt inadequate, worthless. Everything I had hoped for in the past months just vanished in front of me. Gone. Ultimately, I didnât make it into any of my âreachâ schools, which was upsetting, to say the least. I was only left with two choices, neither of which I thought much of at the time. Fast forward nine months into my first week at college. I was bitter. I didnât feel like I belonged, I thought I was better. I belonged at MIT, and thus I made it my goal to transfer there by the end of the school year. Yet as the days went by and friendships were formed, the desire started to fade. It didnât matter that not a single person on my floor did compsci, or that most of my friends were in a completely different field of science. I continued doing what I loved, creating uselessly fun devices. I met people who were piano prodigies, League of Legend gods, and long-distance runners. I realized that itâs not about where you are. Home is where your friends are, and if youâre open about yourself, you can make friends anywhere. Since then, Iâve forgotten about transferring. College is a blur of events thatâll leave you wondering where the time has gone, and youâll soon be asking yourself what you were so stressed about just a few months ago. While some places are undeniably special, it doesnât mean youâll only be content there. Itâs easy to think that you only fit into a specific school, but itâs simply not true. Itâs about what you do that defines you. Not a college, not a decision letter. So take comfort in knowing that your future doesnât lie in the hands of a college admissions officer, but rather yours and yours alone.
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