T.B.Justin wrote:I have 1 academic letter and 1 more in the midst of being written. I exhibited some past (9+ years) patterned behavioral issues that will be apparent on my application; I would have concerns about that if I was on the review committee.
I feel one more way for me to address that is a recommendation from my therapist which I feel would give more credence to who I am today but I am not sure if its appropriate as a recommendation per se.
I'd appreciate any thoughts on the matter!
Hmmm, this is very interesting, and raises a situation that really made me think.
The usual way of handling a problem is to use an addendum, and then perhaps have one or more of your LOR writers address it as well. This case sounds different to me, though, especially when you say, "I would have concerns about that if I was on the review committee."
Having a therapist write a LOR isn't really the right angle, in my opinion, simply because it's not really a LOR. So, what I would do is a sort of modified/combined approach:
- Write this out as an addendum. Come clean in the way you did above, and acknowledge the issue head-on. I can see the opening being very similar to your comment above: "I have exhibited some past patterned behavioral issues that are apparent on my application; I would have concerns about that if I was on the review committee, and I'd like to take a moment to separately address those issues and reassure the committee that these are not a concern going forward" or something similar. Then, after discussing the issues, include a separate notarized statement from the therapist (with full contact info); you can reference parts of the statement in the addendum if needed.
The above approach isolates the issues and also allows for the therapist statement. This avoids using up a LOR on the therapist, and allows those other parts of your application to stand as positives for you.
Please let me know what you think. Thanks!