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Doing the right thing.

August 14, 2017 by EssaySnark - Discusses Berkeley Haas, Darden, Yale SOM, INSEAD, Stanford GSB 2 Comments

Today we’ll tell you a story.

This one time, EssaySnark was coming home from a business trip, and we were on that little bus that takes you to the airport after you drop off your rental car. Right when the bus driver was about to close the door, a woman came running up behind. EssaySnark said to the driver, “Hold up, here’s someone else.”

The driver closed the door. We said louder, “Hey, wait a sec, someone’s coming.”

Some of the woman’s friends were already on the bus. “Please wait,” they said. “Our friend.”

The driver started to pull away from the curb. EssaySnark stood up in the aisle – surely he must’ve heard us? – and yelled over the engine noise, “HEY! WAIT!”

He looked back in the rear view mirror. Eye contact. Looked away. Kept driving.

WTF?

EssaySnark went up to the front of the bus. “Didn’t you see her? That lady was trying to catch the bus.”

“Please take your seat while the bus is in motion.”

Couldn’t believe it.

When we got to the terminal, we called the car rental company, and we narked off the bus driver. We asked for a manager to come talk to us. The bus waited too. The airport was not that busy.

A second shuttle bus arrived with the supervisor, and also the woman who’d been left behind, who was reunited with her friends.

You know what the supervisor said? That he’d done it before. That it was against training.

We were like, “Yeah, you used to have that little recorded message saying something about customer service is important but when you don’t play that anymore then we were wondering if new management took over or something.”

She was all, “We do have a recorded message that plays on the bus.”

We were like, “No, there was no recorded message that played.”

The bus driver had disconnected it. Why? Maybe because the little “Welcome to the airport” recording had an invitation to fill out a customer satisfaction survey at the end of it.

Pretty sure that driver was separated from his job that day.

This is a VERY small and VERY insignificant story — not at all comparable to protesting Nazis — but it’s an incident we remember vividly. Somebody was being mistreated, and we stood up and said something. We had planned to share this with you in the context of essays this week. We expanded this post considerably after what happened this weekend.

You don’t have to be out in the streets protesting. Yet we’re sure you have similar stories.

These are how you can reveal your character.

If you want to be very task-focused: These are the types of stories that, sometimes, when heartfelt and told with conviction*, can move an adcom reader in an essay.

When we talk about values, we’re talking about stuff like this. It’s the small moments that make up your life. Our values let us know when we’re being true to ourselves. They help us make decisions.

Now before you get all indignant: “OMG EssaySnark, you got that guy fired!!” We’ll counter with some advice that we heard from a career coach a long time ago: When you get fired, it’s a gift. Your company is freeing you to go find something you’re happier in. Because clearly, it was not working out, and you weren’t listening to the evidence that was trying to tell you so. If your job is to pick people up and take them to the airport, then that’s what you do, to the best of your ability. You don’t leave them at the curb.

If in your job, you find yourself leaving people at the curb, then hey, that’s a pretty big sign that you’re not happy!! Either change yourself, or change your job!
 

* * *

 
We’re telling you this today not just because maybe it’ll help you think of new topics for your essays.

We’re telling you because WHEN YOU SEE SOMETHING THAT’S F*CKED UP, YOU MUST SAY SOMETHING.

We’re living in a world where a lot of f*cked up things are happening.

Did that Google engineer deserve to get fired for what he wrote?

Not sure. That’s a hugely complicated situation. His argument about women engineers has some sound science at the beginning (there are indeed biological differences between men and women) but then the reasoning he used to get to his conclusions is twisted (it is not true that those differences are why there are fewer women in tech). The argument is fatally flawed; it is not logical. Is he entitled to his opinion? Sure. Did he make other valid points about the current environment in Silicon Valley tech companies? Yes. Is a company in California allowed to fire at will? Indeed they are.

Should anyone be resorting to threats or acts of violence to defend their point of view? NO — yet the firing of the engineer provoked many on the alt-right to do just that, and now some Google execs are afraid.

That’s the world we’re living in now.

So what’s the connection to that and the shuttle bus driver and your essays?

It’s that some things are black and white. Some issues are easy to see. Some problems do not require debate or “further study” which is what the President said about the Charlottesville violence on Saturday. WTF?

When you see something that is not right, say something.

Let’s all look at how we respond to everyday life.

“Hate never yet dispelled hate.
Only love dispels hate.
That is the Law,
ancient and inexhaustible.”

– The Buddha

The airporter bus driver was not spewing hate.

But what he did was not right.

The Google engineer was expressing his opinion. However that view of the world would not exactly create a welcoming environment for women who had to work with him. What’s more, that kind of faulty reasoning is the basis for much of the alt-right’s indignation about being victimized by others (you certainly see massively bad logic and effed-up reasoning on the left, too; this post is not about right or left, it’s about right or wrong).

It’s not your job to change people’s minds. We’re not saying to proselytize or preach.

But what you do owe yourself, and to all of us as a society, is to speak up when you see something going down.

What moments do you remember, however small, where you know what you did was right?

Some schools invite you to talk about that in your essay.

EssaySnark invites you to live that in your life.

The story we shared today is admittedly very “small”; we also used a lot of words to tell it. But it (we hope) reveals a small slice of character. That’s what stories do. That’s why they’re so powerful to use in your essays.

We also hope that you’ll consider the power of words. If you currently are in the habit of posting inflammatory comments on anonymous forums or you like to rile up others by being intentionally combative in how you respond on social media, we ask that you pause. Look at yourself. Ask why do you do it. Strong views are fine, and commendable; it’s good to believe in something. It is not necessary to hurt other people through verbal attacks, no matter how much “fun” you think it is. Getting a rise out of someone by saying something shocking and rude is a very low form of entertainment. That buzz of adrenaline can become addicting, but is that who you want to be? If you’re doing it online, you’re doing it. Doesn’t matter if you think nobody knows. You are as bad as your worst online habits. What you do on the internet is who you are. All of it. If you currently do anything out there on the web that you don’t want someone to know about, we invite you to face up to that, and ask yourself why. And please, NEVER PARTICIPATE IN DOXING. Or revenge-posting of photos. None of it. Seriously harmful. Seriously not cool.

You could be spending your energy on something so much more valuable.

Like working to get into bschool.

 

* * *

 

Finally: We debated whether to post this. There’s been plenty of posts about values here lately and a charge against us of virtue signaling could have merit. We also like to believe that most BSers reading the blahg don’t need to be preached to about lying or cheating or ramming cars into crowds or taking a gun to an early-morning practice at a softball field. We welcome all belief systems and political views here. Deadlines are coming, and we’ve got plenty to say about apps!

Yet, damn, we just can’t help it. This is a BIG MOMENT in our country’s history. We refuse to say nothing.

Our “new normal” is not normal.

This country has problems, yes. We are also lacking any real leadership that might solve them. Each person individually must stand for their values; after all, you’re interested in the MBA to change the world. Well, this is EssaySnark’s small platform to do that. We hope that someday soon, we’ll be able to go back to talking only about MBA essays.

That UVA Darden essay question sure takes on new significance today:

“When preparing for class at Darden, students formulate an opinion on each case before meeting with their learning teams and class sections. When encountering different views and perspectives from their own, opinions frequently shift. Tell us about a time when your opinion evolved through discussions with others.”

 
 
 

* Please just make sure that the story you’re telling is a fit to the essay prompt.

Filed Under: values Tagged With: storytelling Bschools: Berkeley Haas, Darden, Yale SOM, INSEAD, Stanford GSB

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We're the snarky experts in MBA admissions!

Sometimes amused and often appalled by what candidates write in their MBA applications to top bschools, EssaySnark created this little blahg to share common mistakes. Learn from them and avoid making admissions directors laugh (or want to hurl) when they read your essays. If you are hoping to have your essay reviewed anonymously on the blahg for free, submit it for consideration.

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Good luck on your apps, Brave Supplicant!

Here's what others have said about this:

  1. Catherine K. says

    August 15, 2017 at 3:04 pm

    This is absolutely an incredible and much needed post. Thank you so much, Essaysnark, for sharing the bus driver story, and relating it to what is truly a problem in our country. It reminded me of exactly why I want an MBA from a top school–I want to be a leader who does not fear pointing out what is not right or how things can be made better, and have the skills and credentials to be a decision maker in this crazy society we live in where we are falling back on hatred and ignorance because it is familiar and an impulse people feel they shouldn’t have to control. I don’t want to be comfortable, want to encourage my future team to never get too comfortable in the status quo.

    I have a lot to think about with this post, so again, thank you for sharing!!!

    Reply
    • essaysnark says

      August 15, 2017 at 10:33 pm

      @Catherine, thank you for this comment! We get a little worried, when we write a post that says “Don’t preach!”, that we’re getting preachy ourselves. We appreciate that you were able to read this from the same perspective as we were trying to write it, and we do hope that it generates some further insights that can be useful. If you have any subsequent observations to share, or maybe your own “bus driver” story, we would love for you to do so to any extent you’re comfortable with that!

      EssaySnark

      Reply

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