Random Thoughts


Kanal geosi va tili: O‘zbekiston, Inglizcha
Toifa: Telegram


SAT
IELTS
College Application
owner @oybekin4k who:
got into NYU, Wooster and many more.
international real madrid hater

Связанные каналы

Kanal geosi va tili
O‘zbekiston, Inglizcha
Statistika
Postlar filtri


10 days left? Ed1 decision is coming☠


Why do we place so much importance on age, as if it holds the secret to understanding someone? Age is just a marker of time, not a reflection of experiences, dreams, or the depth of a person’s soul. It doesn’t reveal the challenges they’ve faced, the love they’ve given, or the knowledge they’ve gained along the way. It tells you nothing about the fire in their heart or the strength in their spirit.

When we focus on age, we reduce a person to a timeline, ignoring the richness of their journey. Some people find their purpose early, while others bloom later, each path uniquely beautiful. Growth, resilience, and passion don’t follow a clock; they unfold in their own time, shaped by the choices we make and the lives we live.

Instead of asking about age, ask what inspires them, what they dream about, or what lessons they hold close. These are the things that truly define us, far beyond the tick of a clock. Age may mark the passing of years, but it’s the stories within those years that truly matter.


#sleeplessnight
#iwritewhatithink


Winter?


Yet we keep living


Hello World,

Until December 7th, this space might go silent. Two exams and over 20 supplements are staring me down, and they’re not writing themselves. If I do post, it’ll likely be a quick share or a repost that feels worth your time.

For those of you also in the trenches of college apps—keep at it. One essay at a time, one deadline at a time. We’ll get through.

Peace✌️


truly lifesaver: you can receive emails without leaving your most used app - telegram. this bot is more valuable while applying colleges.

use it, it is official bot of gmail.com. you dont have to worry about your privacy.
@GmailBot


People message him with questions, expecting immediate responses, as though his existence were nothing more than a service to their convenience. When he does not reply within the allotted seconds, they quickly deem him rude, uninterested, or unreliable, as if his purpose on earth is to cater to their whims. But he knows better. He owes them nothing. His life is not a commodity to be exchanged for quick answers. They demand, but they fail to understand that time is not theirs to take, nor is attention a debt to be paid. If they want answers, let them search for them themselves. The tools are there—Google, a vast library of knowledge. He is not their servant, nor their guide.

Next time you send a message expecting an answer, remember this: just because you ask doesn’t mean anyone owes you their time. The world doesn’t stop when you hit ‘send.’ Your questions are not urgent unless they’ve earned urgency. Or wait. Wait for someone who actually values your time as much as theirs, someone who understands that giving an answer is not a chore, but a choice.

Disclaimer: This message is meant to encourage respect for everyone’s time. Responding to questions is a kindness, not an obligation. Please be mindful of others’ time and boundaries when reaching out.


Abbosinho


less goo


🇺🇿


when you have to write a 650-word essay


Freshman Academy dan repost
⚡️Uni-Insiders: Exploring Princeton University

Join us this Sunday at 9 PM (UTC +5) for an insightful session with three exceptional Princeton students — Sayfullo, Feruza, and Vasila — as they share how Princeton's mission of service-driven leadership shapes their academic and extracurricular journeys.

Sayfullo Saidov, a freshman with a major in Civil & Environmental Engineering, serves as an officer for both the Japanese Students Association and Central Asian Students Association. He is also a member of Engineers Without Borders and Princeton Rocketry, and a Research Fellow at Princeton's Office of Sustainability.

Feruza Mukhammadieva is majoring in Computer Science and minoring Statistics & Machine Learning. She holds the Career Development chair at the Princeton Society of Women Engineers, is Co-President of the Central Asian Student Association, and is active in the Entrepreneurship Club and AI TigerTrek.

Vasila Mirshamsova is a Computer Science major with minors in Statistics & Machine Learning and Mathematics. Vasila is the Head Web Design and Development Editor for The Daily Princetonian, co-founded and co-presides over the Central Asian Student Association, and has held research and software engineering internships, including an upcoming role at Google.

The event is typically exclusive to Freshman students, but this Sunday, we are opening access to all.

✅ To register, you will need to:

1. Send a “+” in the comments and share the post in your IG stories or Telegram Channel

2. If you have a private account on Instagram, share the screenshot of your story with us.

*Members of the Freshman Alumni Network will receive a separate link on the official Alumni Channel


Listen, try your best. Genuinely give your all to realizing your goal or vision. But if it does not work out, learn to move on.

There is no reason to get obsessed with an unattainable objective that may not make sense anymore.

Our world is full of with new opportunities, frontiers, and people. Keep pushing while believing, perhaps naively, that the future holds something special for you.




wanna craft another one


finally i got feedback on my ps. i learned a lot.


lol


write, get feedback, write, get feedback.


i asked chatgpt to generate my current life based on what ai knows about me.

i got this image. the picture is full philosophical books and sat prep😄

generate yours, and share.


The past few weeks I went through quite a lot of personal statements and activity sections. Here’s the thing, i’m no expert on essays, but I could objectively tell that some essays weren’t good. Essays had nothing about the writer and were just achievements dumps, and activity descriptions were vague and sometimes even used politically incorrect language. Yet, i’m not writing this post to call out on people being “not good” at crafting applications. Nobody was good at anything in the beginning. My main point is, the writers aren’t the ones to blame for this.

Almost half of them had their essays and applications reviewed by “Ivy League mentors” and “full supports.” Ironically, all of them got amazing feedback from their mentors and were told to submit their applications.

People who are planning to apply, PLEASE be careful with who you hire as a “mentor” and who you get services from.

As far as I know, there’s only one “full support program” in Uzbekistan that know what they’re doing, and we all know who they are. Don’t waste your time and money on mentors who pop out of nowhere, and remember, whatever is provided by those fake gurus can be learned on Google and YouTube.

My daily controversy. Peace ✌️

by Abdulaziz (Harvard'28)

20 ta oxirgi post ko‘rsatilgan.