Anyone who knows me well knows that I have a propensity for incorporating much more than the percent daily value of cheese into my social relations. Some people avoid them at all costs, but I love the ironic predictability that cliches bring into our interactions with others and the world around us. Like it or not, cliches become cliches because they hold true across time and cultures. Essentially laws of our social existence, they aren't going away any time soon, so why not embrace them instead of avoiding them?
The last thing that I wanted my personal essay to become was a story of my quest for self in college. We all know the story: college is a time for self discovery. At first, I aimed to blast this old adage to smithereens with my essay. Why should I need to "find myself"? I am me, I am here, I know my thoughts and why I do what I do, what is there to find? But the more late-night conversations I hold with friends who I didn't know two or three weeks ago, the more new people I meet, and the closer I get to my fourth week away from home, the more I realize that college really is a voyage of self discovery! Maybe not "finding yourself" per se, but finding out what you know, what you want to learn, and what you believe. I've begun to write about just what I wanted to avoid writing about - but if it's really me, really what I've been thinking about - why not write about it?
I discuss cliches of success in my essay. I agree with your post and I absolutely love that someone else is thinking in this mindset.
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