Anonymous wrote:we live in one of the most advanced country.
why should being normal and middle class be penalized.
Such a fukced up system.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:isn't lived experiences redundant? Colleges should be encouraging students to be clear, concise writers by avoiding such phrases.
No, it’s not redundant. Read the thread. Plenty of explanations.
Do you have an example of a personal experience that is not a lived experience?
Lived experience refers to experiencing something yourself rather than obtaining knowledge about something passively, ie through media or secondhand.
Writing about a non-lived experience in a college essay would be ridiculous. Agree with the person above who said the word "lived" is redundant.
An "experience" is going on a mission trip to "help" people in poorer countries. Lived experience is actually growing up in those conditions. You're welcome.
The meaning is exactly the same if you take out the word lived. It’s unnecessary to make the point.
The meaning of "exactly the same" is the same if you take out the word "exactly" . It's unnecessary to make the point. Look who's the snowflake lib now!
lol!
Snowflake and lib are redundant. Keep trying.
Nothing left of your argument. Nothing left but word games.
But you like word games. Which is why some of you are so desperately trying to split hairs here. If you actually had an interesting story to tell you wouldn't need to call it a lived experience. The experience would speak for itself.
Your argument is actually with Edmund Husserl, who coined the term to articulate a specific phenomenological idea, the very one about which AOs are asking.
Unfortunately Husserl died in 1938. Maybe that's why you're arguing with strangers online.
What is it you think you are doing?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:isn't lived experiences redundant? Colleges should be encouraging students to be clear, concise writers by avoiding such phrases.
No, it’s not redundant. Read the thread. Plenty of explanations.
Do you have an example of a personal experience that is not a lived experience?
Lived experience refers to experiencing something yourself rather than obtaining knowledge about something passively, ie through media or secondhand.
Writing about a non-lived experience in a college essay would be ridiculous. Agree with the person above who said the word "lived" is redundant.
An "experience" is going on a mission trip to "help" people in poorer countries. Lived experience is actually growing up in those conditions. You're welcome.
The meaning is exactly the same if you take out the word lived. It’s unnecessary to make the point.
The meaning of "exactly the same" is the same if you take out the word "exactly" . It's unnecessary to make the point. Look who's the snowflake lib now!
lol!
Snowflake and lib are redundant. Keep trying.
Nothing left of your argument. Nothing left but word games.
But you like word games. Which is why some of you are so desperately trying to split hairs here. If you actually had an interesting story to tell you wouldn't need to call it a lived experience. The experience would speak for itself.
Your argument is actually with Edmund Husserl, who coined the term to articulate a specific phenomenological idea, the very one about which AOs are asking.
Unfortunately Husserl died in 1938. Maybe that's why you're arguing with strangers online.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:isn't lived experiences redundant? Colleges should be encouraging students to be clear, concise writers by avoiding such phrases.
No, it’s not redundant. Read the thread. Plenty of explanations.
Do you have an example of a personal experience that is not a lived experience?
Lived experience refers to experiencing something yourself rather than obtaining knowledge about something passively, ie through media or secondhand.
Writing about a non-lived experience in a college essay would be ridiculous. Agree with the person above who said the word "lived" is redundant.
An "experience" is going on a mission trip to "help" people in poorer countries. Lived experience is actually growing up in those conditions. You're welcome.
The meaning is exactly the same if you take out the word lived. It’s unnecessary to make the point.
The meaning of "exactly the same" is the same if you take out the word "exactly" . It's unnecessary to make the point. Look who's the snowflake lib now!
lol!
Snowflake and lib are redundant. Keep trying.
Nothing left of your argument. Nothing left but word games.
But you like word games. Which is why some of you are so desperately trying to split hairs here. If you actually had an interesting story to tell you wouldn't need to call it a lived experience. The experience would speak for itself.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:isn't lived experiences redundant? Colleges should be encouraging students to be clear, concise writers by avoiding such phrases.
No, it’s not redundant. Read the thread. Plenty of explanations.
Do you have an example of a personal experience that is not a lived experience?
Lived experience refers to experiencing something yourself rather than obtaining knowledge about something passively, ie through media or secondhand.
Writing about a non-lived experience in a college essay would be ridiculous. Agree with the person above who said the word "lived" is redundant.
An "experience" is going on a mission trip to "help" people in poorer countries. Lived experience is actually growing up in those conditions. You're welcome.
The meaning is exactly the same if you take out the word lived. It’s unnecessary to make the point.
The meaning of "exactly the same" is the same if you take out the word "exactly" . It's unnecessary to make the point. Look who's the snowflake lib now!
lol!
Snowflake and lib are redundant. Keep trying.
Nothing left of your argument. Nothing left but word games.
But you like word games. Which is why some of you are so desperately trying to split hairs here. If you actually had an interesting story to tell you wouldn't need to call it a lived experience. The experience would speak for itself.
Anonymous wrote:I agree with colleges requesting lived experiences. To many people feel at liberty to embellish their innocuous story and make it someone elses story, which should not be allowed. It is lying.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:isn't lived experiences redundant? Colleges should be encouraging students to be clear, concise writers by avoiding such phrases.
No, it’s not redundant. Read the thread. Plenty of explanations.
Do you have an example of a personal experience that is not a lived experience?
Lived experience refers to experiencing something yourself rather than obtaining knowledge about something passively, ie through media or secondhand.
Writing about a non-lived experience in a college essay would be ridiculous. Agree with the person above who said the word "lived" is redundant.
An "experience" is going on a mission trip to "help" people in poorer countries. Lived experience is actually growing up in those conditions. You're welcome.
The meaning is exactly the same if you take out the word lived. It’s unnecessary to make the point.
The meaning of "exactly the same" is the same if you take out the word "exactly" . It's unnecessary to make the point. Look who's the snowflake lib now!
lol!
Snowflake and lib are redundant. Keep trying.
Nothing left of your argument. Nothing left but word games.
But you like word games. Which is why some of you are so desperately trying to split hairs here. If you actually had an interesting story to tell you wouldn't need to call it a lived experience. The experience would speak for itself.

Anonymous wrote:A “lived experience” is how you’ve moved around in the world. For example, if you’re a white, straight, middle class male, your “lived experience” is likely one where you’ve enjoyed a multitude of privileges and very few road blocks such as discrimination. You’ve likely never been profiled in a store or stopped by the police simply because you’re walking down the street. The images and role models of success that have been in the media since you were born have mostly looked like you.
An “experience” is just that. It’s a one-time event. An example might be that you were mugged on the way home and it caused you to think differently about your life in a profound way. Or maybe you had the “experience” of volunteering in a homeless shelter and learned things about yourself.
No one is trying to “get around” the SCOTUS decision. If you’ve read it, you’d know that Roberts laid the groundwork for this approach. Colleges want a student body filled with diverse experiences, and there’s nothing illegal about soliciting information about its applicants as they build their next incoming class.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A “lived experience” is how you’ve moved around in the world. For example, if you’re a white, straight, middle class male, your “lived experience” is likely one where you’ve enjoyed a multitude of privileges and very few road blocks such as discrimination. You’ve likely never been profiled in a store or stopped by the police simply because you’re walking down the street. The images and role models of success that have been in the media since you were born have mostly looked like you.
An “experience” is just that. It’s a one-time event. An example might be that you were mugged on the way home and it caused you to think differently about your life in a profound way. Or maybe you had the “experience” of volunteering in a homeless shelter and learned things about yourself.
No one is trying to “get around” the SCOTUS decision. If you’ve read it, you’d know that Roberts laid the groundwork for this approach. Colleges want a student body filled with diverse experiences, and there’s nothing illegal about soliciting information about its applicants as they build their next incoming class.
So, what if you were white and had a pretty crummy life and not one of privilege?
Write about it. How did you overcome your challenges?
Not everyone can. That's the point. Not everyone takes vacations, has privileged internships, jobs, etc. Ironically everything you list is those of privilege. If someone mugged me they'd be pissed at what they got.
No one wants to hear about your vacations or internships. That has nothing to do with overcoming challenges or lived experience.
The problem with that is some things are private
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:isn't lived experiences redundant? Colleges should be encouraging students to be clear, concise writers by avoiding such phrases.
No, it’s not redundant. Read the thread. Plenty of explanations.
Do you have an example of a personal experience that is not a lived experience?
Lived experience refers to experiencing something yourself rather than obtaining knowledge about something passively, ie through media or secondhand.
Writing about a non-lived experience in a college essay would be ridiculous. Agree with the person above who said the word "lived" is redundant.
An "experience" is going on a mission trip to "help" people in poorer countries. Lived experience is actually growing up in those conditions. You're welcome.
The meaning is exactly the same if you take out the word lived. It’s unnecessary to make the point.
The meaning of "exactly the same" is the same if you take out the word "exactly" . It's unnecessary to make the point. Look who's the snowflake lib now!
lol!
Snowflake and lib are redundant. Keep trying.
Nothing left of your argument. Nothing left but word games.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:isn't lived experiences redundant? Colleges should be encouraging students to be clear, concise writers by avoiding such phrases.
No, it’s not redundant. Read the thread. Plenty of explanations.
Do you have an example of a personal experience that is not a lived experience?
Lived experience refers to experiencing something yourself rather than obtaining knowledge about something passively, ie through media or secondhand.
Writing about a non-lived experience in a college essay would be ridiculous. Agree with the person above who said the word "lived" is redundant.
An "experience" is going on a mission trip to "help" people in poorer countries. Lived experience is actually growing up in those conditions. You're welcome.
The meaning is exactly the same if you take out the word lived. It’s unnecessary to make the point.
The meaning of "exactly the same" is the same if you take out the word "exactly" . It's unnecessary to make the point. Look who's the snowflake lib now!
lol!
Snowflake and lib are redundant. Keep trying.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"Lived experience" is an intensified expression to emphasize that it's about what happened to you, not just what you read in a book or saw in a movie. It's a way to refute people claim that something can't be true because it doesn't fit their knowledge and world view.
The rest of the furor is people hating others who experience doesn't match what the hater wants to be true.
You really underestimate people's ability to read and comprehend. They will be able to figure out that something happened to you pretty easily without the intensified expression. My arm got blown off in a war torn area means something entirely different than reading about an arm being blown off in a book. How stupid do you think these people are?
Anonymous wrote:"Lived experience" is an intensified expression to emphasize that it's about what happened to you, not just what you read in a book or saw in a movie. It's a way to refute people claim that something can't be true because it doesn't fit their knowledge and world view.
The rest of the furor is people hating others who experience doesn't match what the hater wants to be true.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:isn't lived experiences redundant? Colleges should be encouraging students to be clear, concise writers by avoiding such phrases.
No, it’s not redundant. Read the thread. Plenty of explanations.
Do you have an example of a personal experience that is not a lived experience?
Lived experience refers to experiencing something yourself rather than obtaining knowledge about something passively, ie through media or secondhand.
Writing about a non-lived experience in a college essay would be ridiculous. Agree with the person above who said the word "lived" is redundant.
An "experience" is going on a mission trip to "help" people in poorer countries. Lived experience is actually growing up in those conditions. You're welcome.
The meaning is exactly the same if you take out the word lived. It’s unnecessary to make the point.
The meaning of "exactly the same" is the same if you take out the word "exactly" . It's unnecessary to make the point. Look who's the snowflake lib now!
lol!