i thought i'd share my application essay with you guys, because it speaks so much about myself, something that i thought these questions could never make me do. the way the application form was structured and planned out, i had the freedom to write whatever i wanted to and not what i needed to. there were so many drafts for this essay, that i got lost in them all at one point. this essay is still unfinished somewhat, because i rushed it towards the end, but it still captures quite well what i intended it to.
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the beautiful thing about being able to come back home when travelling anywhere, i have come to realise, is that i can look out of the same window on the way there and back again and see everything on both sides of the path i've taken. i walk this path in life only once, and there's no coming back, unfortunately. there are countless windows. i’ll look through many of them on the way to my destination, hoping to see something different; something better in my life. inevitably, i'll miss a few sights here and there, but it's in making the most out of what i do get to see that will determine the way things turn out for me. i don't want to spend my days searching for life's meaning. i have always wanted to find out how i can put more meaning into my life.
a trip with my family to south africa a few years ago gave me a chance to feel the pulse of the world outside my own. little did i expect to be enlightened by the southern tip of the dark continent. south africa is a vibrant, beautiful country. i’ve seen shows about her on television, but one can't capture atmosphere on film. the country has its problems like any other, but the natural beauty of her lands and people is unsurpassed by anything i have ever seen. i watched an imax documentary on the serengeti years ago, but you have to really be there to feel the ground rumble beneath your feet as the wildebeest storm past. cape of good hope, the third most southern cape on the african continent, is a slice of heaven on earth. there i stood, precariously perched atop a cliff’s edge as the clouds flew right through me. it felt like it was happening the other way around, really. the countless natural features tugged and tossed around my emotions: cascading waterfalls, abysmal valleys, endless plains, homeless beggars, shanty towns and the like. however, towards the end of my vacation, something transpired which made me stop and think about how this world really works. at a traffic junction in one of the suburban districts, a coloured man strolled up to our car and pulled a gun out. in broad daylight, he pointed it at the driver, my uncle, and demanded money in afrikaans. my uncle nonchalantly sped off, oblivious to the paleness of his passengers. "they do that," he explained, "to welcome tourists to johannesburg. murder is a far worse crime to be accountable for than armed robbery, so they'll never pull the trigger." every country like south africa has a different (and sometimes shocking) way of working, but what is undeniable is that everything still works. the people just pick up their baggage again, and keep on moving. people may have different ways of begging, talking or acting but the outcome is essentially the same in singapore, india, germany, california, new york, arizona, australia, dubai, indonesia, malaysia and every other place i’ve been to in my life. people just keep on moving.
it wasn't a life-altering experience, though. even such memories start to dissolve in my mind as the years go by. however, each experience registers something deep within me, and gradually i am shaped. each experience changes the way i perceive the next. the words of jd salinger, harper lee and bertrand russell and the many books on philosophy and history that i have read seem trivial compared to my experiences. in pretoria’s national heritage museum, i learnt how mahatma gandhi fine-tuned his art of peaceful resistance in south africa which he later used to great effect against the british in india. i realise now that i am the second indian to have gone to south africa to (unwittingly) fine-tune that art. i resist what i am comfortable with because i know that it is the only way i can ever create new ideas and opinions. only when we challenge the norm do we really see the world with our own eyes. i don’t want to live my life in regret of not having tried that. right now i spend my time challenging what students accept as charity here in singapore. with my book and various initiatives in schools, i seek to convince youths to donate their time, more than their money, to the less fortunate.
my short, poignant trip to south africa taught me only one lesson, one that i have come to learn very well. there is more to life than just our material comforts. i’m not saying that i live the life of an ascetic, though. i’m a young adult and i’m no different from my peers at a superficial level. i occasionally pick up an album from my favourite alternative groups, i spend my army allowance on a new pair of cymbals for my drum set and i enjoy the latest flicks with my friends just as much as the next person does. the truth is that we are all bound by something greater than just our common ancestral roots. what makes us human is our capacity for compassion, for knowledge and for communication. i want to live my life in service to the world around me. touching lives has always been a dream for me, and i never want to believe that it is something out of my reach.
recently, i read a book that recounted the history of the british isles. one of the accounts struck me with a message that still reverberates in my mind: william the conqueror tripped and fell on his hands when he landed on english soil to claim its crown, and as the crowd around him gasped at the seemingly evil omen, he called out, “see, my lords, i have, by the grace of god, taken possession of england with both of my hands!” the life i live is all about perspective, and it’s the silver lining around every cloud i see that keeps me moving in the right direction. being able to see the extraordinary in ordinary places, people and events lets me put more meaning into my life. i don’t need to be different to see things differently. to me, it’s not about taking the proverbial path less travelled but rather, taking in the path less marvelled.