You don’t have to report your entire life history, @LuhvKiller. You could summarize a lot and then zero in on one or two significant incidents or themes, such as a subject of special interest in school or a formative experience. The main point of such assignments, besides getting acquainted, is to keep you in an area of confident knowledge so you don’t have to worry about the content or look anything up (and also so you pretty much have to write your own paper).
For example:
— Music has always been an important part of my life.
— Life on a horse farm teaches many lessons.
— Growing up in the city, I’ve had a chance to know many different kinds of people.
— I’ve always known I wanted to study medicine.
— Being the youngest of seven, I’ve known right from the start that my place was last in line.
— I never realized it at the time, but when my grandmother taught me to play blackjack for pennies, she was altering my future career.
Do you get the idea? Make a statement about yourself that is somehow distinctive and ties elements of your history together, and then build your narrative on that.