29. Tell us about a conversation you’ve
had that changed your perspective or was otherwise meaningful to you.
(Stanford)
The green linden trees where in bloom. The
delicious scent of Schnitzel wafted out of the kitchen. Grey thunder clouds
were gathering in the sky. The scholer was fizzing away. The Biergarten was
filled with life.
A regular customer would have walked in,
taken a seat at one of the wooden benches, order their regular meal, and not
noticed anything particular about the day, except perhaps the ladies sitting on
one of the tables. One of them often ate at the Biergarten, but the other three
had never been there before. The four
women gave a spectator a glimpse into three generations.
But this all seemed irrelevant to the women
at the table, as they were captivated by their own conversation, especially the
youngest- me. We had gone to meet one of
my mother’s friends and role-models, I will simply refer to her as W. Despite
the age gap between them, they still got along remarkably well. My aunt and I
came along as it was a great privilege to meet W.
W had started her own NGO, after
retirement, and then went on to wholeheartedly dedicate over 30 years of her life
to this project. I have immense respect for her. But the conversation under the
linden trees in the Bavarian Biergarten did not have much to do with her NGO.
Instead, it was about her life, and childhood.
She grew up in a world very different from
mine, in a time when carriages were still sometimes seen on roads, when food
was grown in farms, when the map of Europe had just been re-drawn after the
Great War, and when India was still the crown Jewel of the British Empire.
The conversation left an impact on me. I
realized how little we could truly take for granted in this world. I personally believe that my country will
always be there, and I will always be part of it. In some ways that may be
true, but then again, a country is constantly changing. Wars redraw political
maps, and nations fight for independence.
Once upon a time, Prussia was an essential
part of Germany, yet today a great part of Prussia belongs to other countries.
Someone might have once been German, and today they are Polish. They belong to
a new nation, and have a new identity.
Sitting in the Biergarten that afternoon, I
realized life might change, there may be good times and there may be bad ones,
but as long as you have an optimistic attitude and try to be the best person
you can, everything might just turn out to be alright.
It is easier to say such things, than
actually put the words into action. Being in the presence of person who
achieved this, made me realize that it is possible. As W went on telling her stories, I found
myself imagining what it must have been like to live through a World War, and
then start-up a new life. It must have
been no easy task, but W never showed any of the burdens that her life had
presented her with.
Instead, she helped the people around her,
and her NGO was another way through which she was able to go on handing a
helping hand to people. The conversation was meaningful to me as it inspired me
to live my life in a more purposeful manner. It is easy to be consumed by one’s
own troubles, but there is so much one can do with one’s life, therefore one
should try to do as much as one can with it.
A spectator may have just seen four women
eating lunch under the linden in the Biergarten, yet for me it was much more
than an ordinary lunch. It was an inspirational afternoon that influenced my
views on life. As the scholer was fizzing away, my perspective on life was
being influenced by a remarkable person, W.
Word count: 668
I like the beginning of this very much as you set the scene and give a glimpse into your own heritage. I think when you get to the conversation you need more specifics to bring your point to life. Do you remember a particular line that was stated? a specific anecdote from her life that is illustrative? Specifics would make this much more meaningful and then your "lesson" would not be so vague.
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