How will your life experiences prove beneficial as you move through your degree program? Briefly describe two life experiences and illustrate how each will be useful as you pursue academic goals. How can you reject the negative influences in your life and benefit from the positives to achieve success in your current stage of life?

2 answers

No one can answer these questions except you. Notice all the instances of "you" in there??

Please repost when you have written all this up, and someone here will be happy to critique your writing.
How will your life experiences prove beneficial as you move through your degree program?

My life experience will prove beneficial as I move through my degree program, because through out my past experience I learned what it means to have good time management and how it can help me to maintain sanity and balance in my personal life and my educational life.

Briefly describe two life experiences and illustrate how each will be useful as you pursue academic goals.

One of the two experiences that will help me pursue my goals is having sanity in the way I approach my academic and personal life. I believe that having sanity is very crucial to becoming successful in many goals that are set in one’s life. In the past my sanity level was very low and off balance because of that reason the goals that I set for myself were not attained. Another experiences that will help me pursue my goals is having balance. Balancing my time is the number one experiences that will help me. In the past I had poor life balancing skills which made me fail at attaining my goals. There have to be balance in everything you do in life without anyone can easily fail out of focus.
Now that I know the negative influence of not having sanity and balance in my life I choose to reject the negative influence.

How can you reject the negative influences in your life and benefit from the positives to achieve success in your current stage of life?

I wouldn't spend too much time rejecting anything. Even so-called negative experiences are there to serve you.

Let's say that you got a D.U.I., you might call that a bad experience. But what if the D.U.I. caused you to quit drinking for good. Ultimately the experience served you.

In reality there are no negative experiences, just negative perspectives. Maybe instead of calling an experience negative, you could ask yourself instead. does this serve me or not.