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Topic : How to further improve the flow and crispness in the essay? I am writing an essay in which I used a simple chronological flow. Setting first the background, then the circumstances I was involved - selfpublishingguru.com

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I am writing an essay in which I used a simple chronological flow. Setting first the background, then the circumstances I was involved in and the decision I took, and finally my conclusion after the experience.

I reviewed it several times, but since the story is in my mind. I might be skipping details or interesting information. Plus there might be a way to express it in a more succinct manner.

I would greatly appreciate if you could critique the flow -- if there are parts that are missing which would help to a smoother progress of the story -- and pointing out better ways to express any phrase or idea -- maybe by erasing unneeded words, sentences or paragraphs, or well, expressing it in a better form.

Your observations are greatly appreciated.

Thanks

*NOTE: For comparison purposes, I have included the modified paragraphs below its respective paragraph. *

Reflect on a time when you turned down an opportunity. What was the
thought process behind your decision? Would you make the same decision
today? (600 words)

A few months before finishing graduate school, I was starting to
visualize my graduate life when suddenly a friend told me the latest
news: Lehman Brothers had collapsed underscoring the real concern that
the economy in the US was in a precarious state. I had a limited
perspective on the situation, but I knew that my student visa was
close to expiring and my student loans were running out. I needed to
find a job quickly.

A few months before finishing graduate school, I was starting to
visualize my graduate life when a friend told me that Lehman Brothers
had collapsed. This was terrible news, since it underscored the real
concern that the economy was in a precarious state, and increased my
fear that my student visa would expire or student loans run out before
I could get a formal job. I needed to find one quickly.

After a couple of months, I found an interesting job opportunity. It
was a due diligence job for high-tech patents. It sounded like a good
opportunity that was going to extend my visa as well as pay for my
living expenses and student loans. For these years of economic
instability, it was going to provide me with a stable job.

Nevertheless, once the initial excitement faded away, I got my main
priority back in place. My priority was to pursue a career in the
robotics industry. Thus, the logical initial step was to get a hands
on robotics job which would help me understand the technicalities
behind building and delivering a robot. This step, in my eyes, was
highly important, since it would lay down a path to grow in the field.

Nevertheless, once the initial excitement faded away, it was time to
refocus on my main priority: to pursue a career in the robotics
industry. Thus, the logical initial step was to get a hands on
robotics job which would help me understand the technicalities behind
building and delivering a robot. This step, in my eyes, was highly
important, since it would lay down a path to grow in the field.

Somehow working in High-Tech patents did not seem so appealing
anymore. It would completely deviate me from the robotics industry and
the experience I needed to start off. In short, I was sacrificing my
long term priorities for short term comfort; so, I decided to pass up
the opportunity.

Somehow working in high-tech patents did not seem so appealing
anymore. It would completely derail me from the robotics industry and
the experience I needed to gain in that field. In short, I was
sacrificing my long term priorities for short term comfort, so I
decided to forgo the opportunity.

My decision did not come free of consequences. I had to cut expenses
by moving out of my place and staying with friends; I had to work as a
volunteer in order to maintain my visa status, and I had to learn how
to manage the uncertainty that comes without a formal job. But, after
a few months, I was rewarded with a job in the automation industry. A
job in which I was going to develop software for CNC machines. It was
an exciting role in the right industry.

My decision did not come free of consequences. I had to cut expenses
by moving out of my place and staying with friends, I had to work as a
volunteer in order to maintain my visa status, and I had to learn how
to manage the uncertainty that comes without a formal job. But, after
a few months, I was rewarded with a job in the automation industry, in
which I was going to develop software for CNC machines. It was an
exciting role in the right industry.

From this experience, I realized that when one’s priorities are clear,
the right decisions are easy to figure out. The difficult part is
convincing oneself to take the risks and sacrifices that a decision
will entail. Turning down the job opportunity was the right decision
in my mind and heart, but somehow convincing myself to pursue an
uncertain and risky path instead of a stable and comfortable one was
incredibly challenging.

I am happy that I pursued the right decision and everything worked
out; yet, I am conscious that decisions based on one’s passion and
values need not always turn out so well. That sometimes, circumstances
and timing can undermine one’s personal goals in life. Despite this, I
still believe that in the long run, staying true to one’s priorities
will lead to a more fulfilling life and if I were in a similar
situation today, I would still do the same.

I am happy that I pursued the right decision and everything worked
out, but I am conscious that decisions based on one’s passion and
values do not always turn out so well. That sometimes, circumstances
and timing can undermine one’s personal goals in life. Despite this, I
still believe that in the long run, staying true to one’s priorities
will lead to a more fulfilling life and if I were in a similar
situation today, I would still do the same.


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The flow isn't bad. You have some wording issues and one large clarity problem.

A few months before finishing graduate school, I was starting to visualize my graduate life when suddenly a friend told me the latest news: that Lehman Brothers had collapsed. This was terrible, but it only underscored the real concern that the economy in the US was in a precarious state. I had a limited perspective on the situation, but I knew that my My student visa was close to expiring and my student loans were running out. I needed to find a job quickly.

Use "suddenly" very sparingly, and try to keep it attached to physical actions, like a car crash or a gasp. You could talk about how the door to your room suddenly slammed open and your friend burst in with news, but not "she suddenly told me something."

Similarly, you are describing an ongoing process ("I was starting to visualize") which is interrupted by a concrete event (Lehman's collapse). Either you are in the present moment or you are generalizing, but you can't do both in the same sentence.

Nevertheless, once the initial excitement faded away, I got my main priority back in place. it was time to refocus on my main priority: My priority was to pursue a career in the robotics industry. Thus, the logical initial step was to get a hands on robotics job which would help me understand the technicalities behind building and delivering a robot. This step, in my eyes, was a highly important, step since it would lay down a path to grow in the field.

Somehow working in High-Tech patents did not seem so appealing anymore. It would completely deviate derail me from the robotics industry and the experience I needed to start off gain in that field. In short, I was sacrificing my long term priorities for short term comfort; so, I decided to pass up the opportunity., so I chose to leave the job.

You can't pass up an opportunity after you've accepted it. If you didn't take the job, then you need to reword as something like "While the job had a lot to offer, after I thought about it, I realized I had to focus on my main priority."

My decision did not come free of consequences. I had to cut expenses by moving out of my place and staying with friends;, I had to work as a volunteer in order to maintain my visa status, and I had to learn how to manage the uncertainty that comes without a formal job. But, after a few months, I was rewarded with a job in the automation industry. A job, in which I was going to develop software for CNC machines. It was an exciting role in the right industry.

I am happy that I pursued the right decision and everything worked out; yet, but I am conscious that decisions based on one’s passion and values need not don't always turn out so well. That sometimes, circumstances and timing can undermine one’s personal goals in life. Despite this, I still believe that in the long run, staying true to one’s priorities will lead to a more fulfilling life and if I were in a similar situation today, I would still do the same.

"need not" means more like "isn't obligated to" (You need not return this), not "expected to" (things don't always work out).


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