Post up your skiing themed college essays!

shagalabagala

Active member
No stealing these either, assholes. I know how Newschoolers work. We all apply to the same schools anyways, it'd fuck you over to rip one. I know I applied to every single school anybody on here would.
Here's mine:
I was ecstatic. I yelled, and pumped my fist in the air, shattering the seal of warmthI had worked so hard to maintain. It was 6:45 in the morning, and as I took one ofmy last lift rides up the ski hill, the first rays of sunlight managed to sneak through the trees; a sign that my grueling ordeal was finally coming to an end. For the past 23 hours I had been skiing non-stop at the Greek Peak 24-hour, “Hope on the Slopes” Ski-a-thon. The event’s main purpose was to raise money and awareness for cancer research. However, my main purpose was to be named the 24-hour ski-a-thon champion. In a ski-a-thon, the champion is whoever logs the most ‘vertical feet’ in 24 straight hours of skiing. I was prepared for the event, physically. With more than a decade of downhill racing experience, and fresh off my most recent exploit –a 100 mile run around Cayuga Lake in two days carrying all my supplies on my back –I came into the Greek Peak Ski-a-thon a bit overconfident. I’d checked things out. Sure, there were a few contenders, but it seemed like most of the participants weren’t there for the same reason I was. The morning of the competition was beautiful. Blue skies, sunshine, and fresh snow made for what I thought would be the perfect dayofskiing. As gray clouds moved in and the temperature dropped, my optimism began to dissolve. It ended up raining all daylong. The temperature plummeted after sunset, causing my clothes to freeze to my body. So, I skied. I skied until I fell asleep on the chairlift. I skied until I ran out of food. I skied beyond exhaustion, until I was simply an endurance machine. It was only the arrival of daylight that recharged me, signaling that the event was almost over. Then, after 24 hours of solidskiing, I stumbled into the base lodge and promptly fell asleep, withmy ski boots as a pillow. Outside, at the award ceremony a few hours later, I had my old confidence back. I was pretty sure I’d won the prize for ‘most vertical feet skied’ and was feeling good about it. I looked around at the small crowd huddling to stay warm in the coldmorning air. I had to admit, the folks still here were pretty enthusiastic about raising money for cancer, but none of them had done what I’d just done. I was practically bouncing with pride. The ceremony started off with the Star-Spangled Banner. Hats came off, and I noticed several bald heads that had been hiding under those knit caps. Awards came next. There was an award for the team that had raised the most money –thousands of dollars. Someone from that team spoke about a co-worker that was undergoing chemotherapy and radiation treatment. They brought him up; he was one of the bald folks. He pumped both fists into the air and everyone cheered. There was an award for the individual that had raised the most money. She spoke about her brother’s battle with cancer;about his strength and his dignity in the face of death. There were more cheers and applause as she stepped down. Then it was time for the award I had come to claim. Suddenly, I wasn’t bouncing with pride anymore. In fact, as I accepted my award, I felt like a complete loser. I could say that I was suddenly overcome by a wave ofaltruism, and donated my winnings to cancer research… but that would be a lie. Instead, in a daze, I accepted my prize money and retreated to a picnic table to wallow in self disgust. All of a sudden, the 300 dollars in my pocket felt like a stamp of arrogance, and the worst part was that nobody else could see it. People were genuinely happy for me. One man, in his seventies, whom Iremembered passing severaltimes throughout the night, congratulated me on my victory. He told me through tears about his sister who was battling cervical cancer, and had a month to live. If everybody were as generous as the people here, he said, his sister might live to see her eighties. After a handshake, I gathered my equipment and slowly walked back to the car. Driving home, I finally had a chance to sort things out. Keeping the money wasn’t bad, necessarily. I was an endurance athlete and had signed up to compete. I’d earned the award through skill and perseverance. Yet these people had undergone chemotherapy and radiation. They had watched loved ones die, had their hairfall out, lost their jobs, and even their families in some cases. I had won the event, yet the people back there –the victims and the survivors of cancer –theywere the real champions. Something clicked then. I truly realized that there are heroes and champions everywhere, living their lives, and fighting their battles, without medals or prizes. They don’t sign up, but theydo it quietly, every day. To me, endurance isn’t about competition and prizes anymore. It’s about treating each new day as an opportunityto live, with grace and a little more humility. It feels good to be in a world of quiet heroes and champions.
 
nice let us know when next years 24 hours thing comes around I dont want to see it on news 10 now after it happens and wish I had done it.
 
The trail less groomed

When I look back on my life, it seems my existence has been clearly divided into two

parts; before I began skiing and after. Ever since my parents wrapped me up in a brightly

colored snow suit and a strawberry print hat, taking me cross country skiing as a baby,

my destiny with the world of skiing would always be intertwined. From these early ages,

I developed a fascination with snow. Even when our family moved to Atlanta, Georgia

and my mother began her PhD, there was no happier day in my early childhood than the

one morning a year that snow accumulated and survived against the lasting warm

weather. It was finally when we moved to Ithaca, NY, and my father took a job at Cornell

University, that I was reunited with my beloved fluff. It was in upstate New York, where

the snow was just plentiful enough, that I began my journey of passion as a bright-eyed

eight year old. I’d take an afternoon bus to Greek Peak mountain resort, skiing alone at

first, to spend week after week, year after year, conquering the seven hundred vertical

feet of east coast ice and snow. It was there among the damp, crumbling lodges and

ungroomed trails that I discovered a feeling I soon fell in love with.

There was a stronger force at hand, and as my understanding of the world has grown,

I’ve realized that this feeling was the satisfaction I received from improvement and

progression. The sport has always been about pushing yourself until you reach that next

level. At the onset, you were given a green circle pass: a badge of inexperience. But after

practice and work, falling and trying again, you could earn the blue square pass, and

eventually the black diamond, the highest altar of difficulty and the key to making the

entire mountain available to your ski edges. But even after I mastered all slopes of any

pitch, I discovered a new kind of skiing that replaced the hazards of moguls and trees

with handrails and jumps. There was no coach, no adult yelling at you to do one thing or

another, just you and your skis. It’s called freestyle skiing, and it allowed me to continue

progressing the sport I loved. I would ski the same jump over and over again from dawn

to dusk, hot steam rising from my breath as I hiked up time after time. I pushed myself

past pain thresholds with sprained jaws, bloody faces, black eyes, pulled muscles, large

bruises, deep cuts, and scars. I’ve worked endless hours in various labors in order to ski

as much as I can. But the satisfaction of accomplishment, the pure joy of landing that

trick you’ve spent so much time trying to conquer, and getting better, makes it all worth

it.

But I haven’t struggled alone. Despite starting out as a lone adventurer of the ski

slopes, skiing has become a very social activity for me. As I reached middle school and

high school, I’ve found individuals who have the same determination and passion as

myself. Interestingly, our relationships also serve as a competitive environment to help

further our own individual progression in the sport, whether during casual skiing, training

sessions, or even legitimate competitions. We’ve spent so much time skiing, filming

skiing, and being together, that our friendships are now life long and very strong. Our

ability to empathize with one another’s experiences of skiing has been a powerful tool of

bonding; the dizzying adrenaline, the satisfaction of progression, and the friendships

we’ve shared.

We’ve seen the ski resort become a second home, our ski clothing a second skin, and

ski boots just another pair of shoes. But that is such a small element of what skiing has

given me. I’m involved in a sport with no coaches, and competitions that are based on

individual effort, so I’ve learned self-motivation and how to depend on myself for

success. Skiing has also given my life a lot of balance, which I find essential to a healthy

existence, with elements of exercise, work, play, socializing, and appreciating nature.

I’ve gained lifelong friends, and understand the importance of nurturing a passion: a

passion that has taught me the struggle of pursuing excellence in one’s actions. It’s my

challenge now to apply what I’ve taken from my time skiing in order to become a better

person and go find my next challenge in life, and that’s what college will help me do. I

can’t wait to dive into something I feel passionate about, something I can do for the rest

of my life, just like skiing. Even though perfection is never truly obtainable, it’s about the

process, the struggle, the passion in it’s pursuit that brings people to great places and

makes the world amazing, and that is what I have experienced with skiing.
 
i tore my ACL so i was not able to participate in gym, so my yeacher had me write an essay. its 4 pages long, and included pictures of different names of rails used in it. It was a research paper from the begining of the sport, to today. It was a beast of a paper, and i really worked my ass off on it and handed it in to her. I talk to her 3 days later and she thought that i got it off the interent somewhere, and she told me that she searched the internet to see if i got it off anywhere. She also went to my english teacher to see if had done it for her that year, and just handing in an old paper. and she took points off for that shit, because she did not believe i wrote it. such bullshit, but whatever i got a 93 on the paper.
 
Got me nice old 75!

By dictionary definition an extreme sport is any recreational activities that involve high risk, aggressive and spectacular stunts, and which appeal to the young. By this definition is big mountain skiing an extreme sport? Big mountain skiing, or commonly known as backcountry skiing, is a type of skiing in which skiers go off of marked trails and ski down steep mountains in places such as Montana, Alaska, and Switzerland. An example of an extreme sport that is similar to big mountain skiing is Alpinism. Alpinism, a European term for mountain climbing, involves climbing mountains trying to reach the highest point that is possible. Alpinism and big mountain skiing have many things in common and have many of the same risks. Some of these risks include: frostbite, avalanche danger, rocks, cliffs, and abominable snowmen. There are many deaths in both of these sports and both fit the criteria of being an extreme sport according to the dictionary definition.

Assum - 2 -

So what exactly is big mountain skiing besides skiing down a steep snow covered mountain? Why should this sport, which millions of older people and children enjoy a year be given such a title as an “extreme sport”? Well in case you didn’t know there is a giant difference from just going down a bunny slope to skiing down massive lines in the AK (Alaska). First off bunny slopes have about an average of about 30 degrees slope. On the other hand big mountain skiers are skiing slopes that have in upwards of a 60 degree slope and sometime and almost vertical. In case you have never seen a big mountain ski video or even a picture of someone skiing a huge line let me try and explain it to you. Just imagine standing on top of a small piece of snowy slope looking down at almost vertical slope with a 50 foot cliff staring you in the face knowing you are going to go off that. The risk involved in big mountain skiing are huge and life threatening and every time those guys click into their skis to hit a massive cliff or take a heli up to the tip of a 13,000 foot face of a mountain they are risking their lives.

There are many high risks involved in big mountain skiing that meet the criteria of it being considered an

Assum - 3 -

extreme sport. One of the deadliest things involved in big mountain skiing are avalanches. Avalanches are rapid flows of snow down a slope that is either cause from natural snowpack or from human activity. Avalanches can include things such are trees, rocks, ice and anything else found on the slope. Avalanches are so deadly in big mountain skiing because the snow the skiers are skiing on is very unstable at times and they can set off avalanches with a wrong turn or from skiing in a bad patch of snow. These avalanches can bury the skiers and can suffocate them in a mater of minutes depending on how tight the snowpack is around them. Skiers take many precautions to prevent themselves from being trapped in avalanches such as have controlled avalanches go off before they hit a certain spot. They also carry beacons which help rescuers find them in a shorter amount of time which greatly increases their chance to live. Another risk in big mountain skiing is falling. If you fall while skiing a giant line you are either going to get very hurt or killed. When you fall going that fast on a slope that steep than you are going to tomahawk (go head over heels rolling down a slope). Tomahawks can be very dangerous because you can easily dislocate a hip or tomahawk over a cliff or into a tree.

Assum - 4 -

Any of these combinations can be deadly or at the very least cause very serious injuries.

Alpinism on the other hand has its own set of risks which are similar and very different from that of big mountain skiing. Alpinism involves trying to reach the highest point of a mountain and the type of mountain climbing, another name for Alpinism, I am talking about is snow mountain climbing. This is the type of mountain climbing that was portrayed in the book Into Thin Air. Throughout the book many people encountered many of the same deaths as many big mountain skiers. The mountain climbers suffered from frostbite, falling off of cliffs, and avalanches. Avalanches occur when mountain climbing much in the same way they happen when one is skiing. They occur when a climber steps on a bad patch of snow or is too loud in an area where the snow pack is very loose. Avalanches while mountain climbing are much more deadly as they take out a whole team of people instead of just one skier and it is much harder to find mountain climbers

buried in avalanches because they are sometimes so high up on a mountain or on a steep face.

Assum - 5 -

These two sports share many of the same qualities in terms of high risk, aggressive stunts, and appeal to the young. Comparing these two sports it is very clear that they are both very extreme and meet the criteria presented by the dictionary definition of an “extreme” sport. Both are very physically demanding and only the most experienced people can even begin to partake in such incredibly challenging activities. These two sports have such a high risk involved because of the many dangers involved with snow such as avalanches, cold weather, and the mountains. These two sports are the most extreme of things that I can possibly imagine doing. Both take so much skill and so much talent to even begin to try and comprehend doing without any serious injury or death. So should big mountain skiing be considered an extreme sport? Yes it should be because it has both a very high risk of injury or death, amazing stunts of giant cliffs and huge lines, and also has an appeal to the young because each year younger and younger more talented kids go out to AK to slay the biggest, steepest, and gnarliest terrain you could think of.
 
Oops I didn't read the thread but you should read it anyone! It's my senior research paper on big mountain skiing and mountain climbing
 
seeing as how alot of people are going to college next year, lets get this thread going and post up your essay. ill put mine up in a little bit
 
ok heres mine. this is just my first draft of it so its a little rough.

“Beep beep”, I awake at 6:45 AM to the sound of my alarm on a snowy, cold Saturday morning in February. I sit at the edge of my bed; stretch and think about how great today is going to be. I slowly walk downstairs fire up the laptop and see what the weather is going to be today. The Weather for today…lots and lots of snow. I jump up and down ecstatically, thinking finally an East Coast powder day. After I eat breakfast, I load up my backpack with my lunch and extra ski gear (gloves, shirts, and a hat). I put everything in my car and head to McDonalds where I meet my friends to ride up to Mt.Snow.

I had to leave a little earlier than usual because the roads were really bad. As I arrive at McDonalds, my friends Kyle and Nico were already inside eating. So I walk in and sit with them while they finish their Mcskillets; which in my opinion are the best breakfast burritos ever. After they finish I unload all of my ski gear out of my car and into Nikos and we head off to Mt.Snow. The drive to Mt.Snow usually takes about 45 minutes from McDonalds in North Adams but today it took about 2 hours because of the snowy roads.

We arrive at Mt.Snow around 9:00 AM and have to park quit a distance from the lodge because it was so crowded. Walking to the lodge, we are all talking about how sick today is going to be. It is the first powder day of the year, and there is about a foot of fresh snow for us to ski. We walk in to the lodge only to find out that there is really no where to put our stuff on. So we head downstairs and find a small table to throw our bags on. We sit down buckle up our boots, put our iPods in and head over to the lift. The lift lines weren’t too long which was good. As we load the lift, we all become excited about all this fresh snow. As we take the ride we look over into the woods and plan out some line we were going to do. Pointing at all wind drifts that we can rip.

We get off the lift at the top of the mountain, and it’s still snowing pretty hard. We start skiing down the mountain trying to find an opening in to the woods so we can ski powder that no one else has. We found this really small opening, and to our amazement, we found the best snow on the mountain. It was soft, fluffy and all around the best snow I have ever skied. As I am skiing down this awesome run, I recall of something my uncle had said to me out in Colorado when we were skiing together. It’s “on powder days, you have no friends”. When he said this to me it made me think. What can this mean? But then I dawned on me; that when you skiing powder you’re not thinking about who your with or what you’re going to have for lunch. It’s about not caring and having a good time. This particular day at Mt.Snow made me remember that quote

After we had taken a couple runs through the woods, we braked for lunch and rested our legs. As I clip my skis off and put them in my hands to walk towards the lodge, my legs start to feel jelly, and my thighs burn. We rest in the lodge for a while, trying to rest are selves for the rest of the day.

After lunch we went back into the woods to try to find a little cliff to drop, and to get some good shots on. We cruise though the woods for about an hour or so, and bam we found the best cliff ever. It’s not too big nor to small, it’s the perfect height, about 7 or 8 feet I would say. We hit the cliff a couple times and before we know it, its 4 o’clock and the lifts are beginning to close. So we quickly ski down to the lift so we can head back up to the top of the mountain and head over to the other side where our car is parked.

We clip off our skis, dust the snow off them and head inside. We start taking our boots off and packing our hats and gloves into our bags and head off to the car. We load up the car and head home. It didn’t take as long to get home because plows have gone though more and cleared the snow off, but it still was longer than normal.

As I’m getting dropped off at McDonalds, I unload my skis and bag from the car and head home. On my home the only thing I can think of is how today was the best I day I had ever had.

 
Not to be a total debbie downer, but won't these pop up if they search lines of your essay online? And they won't know that that's your account that posted it, so they may think you cheated?

(they being teachers/professors)
 
unless your applying to SVA or Pratt I dont think im going to be seeing you at school anytime. can we post or college essays even if they arent skiing anyways?
 
whattt hell yeah I did one back in 10th grade maybe? its on another computer tho I'ma dig it up because the purpose of the paper was to write a short story of some sort using verisimilitude, yeah it's a word look it up hahaha. give me a couple days. I was so psyched on it but i got like a B or C hahaha...it'll be interesting reading it now and seeing what it sounds like.
 
We decided to get a break in the middle of winter. We bought tickets and went to a ski resort in Utah. We arrived there at about lunch time. The weather was terrific, there was a plenty of snow and bright sun shine. The resort was situated in a wonderful place. It was surrounded by a pinery. It was dark, beckoning to walk along its snowy white tracks. Getting the key to our rooms and leaving our things there we dressed up in ski suits, took skis and headed to the pine forest to try its hillocks and tracks.

The forest was full of people, their voices were heard among trees that seemed to be watching over them. Now and then I saw agile and quick squirrels, promising myself to take nuts for them next time. The pinery was like a real paradise comparing with the dirty and hectic city. The air was clean and transparent, filled with pine needle aroma.

Seemed I was about to fly high on the trees tops, I felt so light and small. We were fast running along the ski track, reveling in freedom, strength and youth. We didn’t even notice how we got deep in the forest, there were more trees there, it was silent all around. We were along there.

-Are we lost? – asked my hubby anxiously.

-Don’t worry, I’ve been in thicker forests, and got out of them easily, - I replied derisively.

-Ok, then let’s go! – He laughed in response.

-Wait, let’s get some rest first, I’m short of breath.

We unfastened the skis and sat down right there on the snow taking in the environs.

-It’s beautiful, - said Martin, my husband.

Suddenly we heard quiet tender laughing. Looking around we noticed another young couple standing in about 55 yards from us. They also unfastened their skis and hugged each other. From time to time we could hear the girl’s ringing laughter. They couldn’t see us, we were sitting behind the hillock.

-It’s sort of indecent. – said Martin. Sometimes he was too correct.

-C’mon, there’s nothing wrong about it, - I looked at him, - they’re kissing, let it be so.

In stead of answering he pointed at them - they were no longer just kissing!

The girl was on her knees on the skis taking the guy’s dick out of his blue ski pants. Its bright red color with aristocratic head was so unexpectedly beautiful against the snow background. I got hot feeling something in my lower belly. I made a deep breath.

The girl didn’t waste time - she was caressing the cock with her hands and mouth. It was worth seeing. Her hands and mouth worked together. My husband brought me back to reality.

-He’s brave. Isn’t he afraid to have his shaft freeze?

-I’m cold. Let’s go home!

We fastened the skis and raced with one another to the hotel. All way long I was thinking about the cock sucked by lips with purple lipstick.

 
Back
Top