Whoever said that traditions are overrated is wrong. Traditions exist to give us a sense of comfort and security. A book wouldn’t exist without a draft. A painting wouldn’t be appreciated if it weren’t for the first sketch. The Eiffel Tower wouldn’t be tangible without the plans made by the architect. I still remember the time I got my hands on my first New York Times newspaper. The smell and the thin paper were invigorating, and the big pages and primitive structure made me feel like I was starring Forest Gump. As a book lover, it was my responsibility to preserve this art.
My high school hadn’t had a newspaper in over fourteen years. With two friends, we opened a club for driven young writers. As editor-in-chief, I created a plan to establish the school’s newspaper again. Around the time we’d made progress, I got in contact with the teacher in charge of student ideas and demands. She refused the possibility of funding our print since they were trying to save money for other school events of more significance. Additionally, she advised us to publish it online if we were serious about it, but my commitment to preserving a tangible tradition became impregnable.
The next day, I told them the news. If looks could cut, their look of defeat was worth a thousand cuts. There was an option to settle and print it in normal paper. Our biggest obstacle was discouragement. They were so bumped by the fact that our work would not pay off in the end. But our main goal was so the students of my high school would be able to fully experience getting their weekly newspaper by the front gate. My dad drove me to several places in San Diego asking if they did newsprint. None did. I searched online for hours until I finally found a website that printed newspapers and delivered them. I gathered my team for the next meeting and led a conference where we would brainstorm ideas to fundraise. I made sure that all their ideas were equally implemented in our plan. We did raffles, and sales, and hosted some small events.
Every Tuesday students rushed to the entrance to get a copy. It was at that moment that I felt like it had all been worth it. Despite the limitations, our passion accomplished a tradition to prevail. Obstacles are meant to make you reflect on how much you yearn for a dream. If is not that important one will surrender, if it is, then obstacles are small stones one can easily kick.
This experience improved my self-expression and leadership skills. Making me acknowledge the importance of encouraging young minds to follow their dreams. This sparked my aspiration of becoming an English teacher to motivate students to advocate for what they think is right and make the ‘A’ in STEAM more prominent and permanent. I envision myself teaching at schools where I can encourage Latina girls like me to pursue an artistic career with confidence. As I plan to volunteer in the poorest parts of Mexico, Africa, and India to teach families literacy, I hope my ambitions will take me all around the world like Mark’s career did. I aim for a master’s in creative writing to help me achieve that dream.
In recent years, my father, a person whom I look up to the most, was at risk of deportation. He was detained and incarcerated by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement. Because of this, I became unmotivated and started to lose interest in education. My grades quickly went from straight A’s to C’s and F’s. My determination and strive to learn and expand my knowledge seemed like it had vanished forever.
After a few weeks of this ongoing little to no desire to learn, I became frustrated and angry. Somewhere along the way, I realized that I needed to morph this devastation into motivation. Through this very experience, I began to change my mindset and I discovered new ways of learning that I thoroughly enjoyed.
In my first attempt to enjoy learning again, I started looking for reading material on subjects I was interested in such as psychology. I began reading about experiments and their significant contributions to psychology. From here I became fascinated with psychology and how the mind works. This helped me become more motivated and focused on school.
In school, math has always been a subject that I enjoy. After my father’s incarceration, I became distracted during math class. However, I attempted day after day to overcome my mental obstacles in order to feel that sense of enjoyment again. After a few days of doing so, I became more focused in class and I was finally able to fulfill my desire to enjoy learning math again.
With my own attempts to bring my grades up and enjoy school, I came across the educational program; Upward Bound Math and Science (TRIO) and I did not hesitate to apply. The opportunities that I was presented with through this program further helped me regain my passion for learning. I was surrounded by other individuals who enjoyed learning and had high educational goals for themselves. This helped me stay focused and motivated to achieve what I desired. After a few months in this program and regaining my passion for learning, I set a goal for myself; to be successful in my classes and to eventually get accepted into my dream university, UCLA.
After making this goal for myself, I began applying myself in school. I have been taking AP and college courses during high school that allow me to challenge myself and feel the satisfaction of doing so. I also began participating more in extra curricular activities so I can have a balance between school and fun. Overall, my efforts on overcoming this hardship have allowed me to enjoy education and high school.
The very cause for my educational barrier turned into my prime motivation to strive for educational success. I am currently at the top of my class and excelling in academics, and I plan to continue as I enter college. I have also recently been notified that I have been accepted into UCLA. I am eternally proud that I was able to turn my greatest weakness into my greatest strength. This situation has undoubtedly turned me into the best version of myself.
As a freshman at Springboro HS, I became very ill. It wasn’t a normal illness that could be easily identified, it was a strange debilitating virus that invaded my body. While this illness was short lived, it created a personal hardship I had to overcome.
I am a swimmer; I swim 2-3 hours a day. I had become ill and didn’t realize how sick I was so I kept pushing myself to practice. At the precipice of the illness, I went to see the doctor. My mom urged the doctor to find a cause. I was so weak I couldn’t lift my arms up over my head. I had a blood test completed and it turned out that my creatine phosphokinase (CPK) results were extremely elevated. For a normal person the range is between 26-192 U/L, my blood indicated my CPK level was over 1900 U/L from the first test. This was as if I just completed a marathon (I had been sleeping for nearly two days prior to the test)!
The virus was attacking my muscles; the more I worked out the more CPK was produced by my body to repair the muscles. I was causing a serious condition that could have been fatal. My muscles were breaking down and releasing potassium into my blood stream. If potassium levels get too high it can cause kidney failure and your heart can stop.
Two months and many tests later to eliminate any muscle disease or necrosis, I was cleared to return to swimming. I had fallen behind in my training and I had on-going muscle fatigue to overcome.
I could barely swim when I started training; I had to stop frequently. Daily, I would try to do a little more knowing that I could not lose sight of my original goals of breaking HS records and becoming a State Champion. I kept telling myself that I didn’t have an excuse, the virus was a temporary setback and I kept pushing myself to practice.
Some of the techniques I used were mental, self-motivating techniques. I would set a practice goal and reward myself for achieving it. I swam the 50-yard Freestyle and relay events since I could only swim short distances. I had to prove to myself I was still fast. The first relay I was on as a freshman earned me praise from my teammates. I was the anchor leg and no one could understand why a freshman was swimming fourth. We were in second place against a rival swim team. I dove in the water and gave it my all, caught up, and passed the other team! We took first place in the event and my teammates were ecstatic. I earned the nickname, The Freshman. This was an extrinsic motivating factor that helped me to continue to achieve more.
I didn’t break any records my freshman year, I made the state championship, but I didn’t medal. The next three years I continued working hard, listened to my body, and eventually became the 50- and 100-yard Freestyle Ohio HS State Champion. I hold 6 event records, helped my team win the Southwest Ohio Coach’s Classic (largest HS swim meet in the nation), and have earned a place on the Purdue University swim team.
The obstacle I had to overcome was the mental challenge not to give up on my dreams. I was so extremely fatigued for several months that I didn’t think I would ever regain my edge. I had to challenge myself; I did and I am a much stronger person mentally and physically for overcoming this personal hardship.
An obvious tube hole on the body may be seen as disturbing and unsettling to the naked eye. When I initially encountered the term "scar," I thought of a potentially traumatic or painful occurrence that has happened with a long-lasting detrimental impact on one's memory. Others may not notice, but the port-a-cath scar wound connected to my heart, as well as STEM innovation rescued my life. And it continues to be a symbolic influence to support those around me to convey the mark as a battlefield of a war one conquered in life.
At the start, the scar signified another week of hospitalization, blood transfusion, chemotherapy, spinal taps, bone marrow transplant, or trial studies to manage my leukemia. They also symbolize slipping behind in school, being isolated from classmates, and a never-ending cycle of expensive healthcare bills. As well as too many late-night visits to the emergency department, which would inevitably lead to another round of needle injections, nausea, ingesting massive volumes of medicine, hair loss, and unexpectedly waking up to the audible ringing of my intravenous infusion pole at random times.
Nonetheless, when my health improved after four years of chemotherapy, I discovered my enthusiasm for the STEM profession, since I would not be here today without it. My older sister, who was a member of the FRC 971 Robotics team, was a huge inspiration to me. A further challenge I experienced was not getting admitted into my own high school's FRC team since I was the only girl who applied. This influenced me, even more, to join the all-girls, award-winning FRC team, Space Cookies 1868, during my first year of high school situated in NASA. Joining this robotics team was one of my best decisions in life since I was able to motivate other young girls to pursue their passions and become powerful women in STEM. Every adversity I've faced now reflects a beautiful lesson in building resilience, people I've met through my condition, and the opportunity to make a huge impact in the lives of those who are going through the same thing.
From an early age, I grew to speak for myself, to be an efficient leader, to persevere and excel amid misfortune, to develop into a strong and self-sufficient student, and to seek delight in giving back to my community that supported me during my times of difficulty. I plan to build on those accomplishments by developing important relationships in a new setting that will remain influential in shaping and growing my perception of society and my new offerings to it. Through the years, I challenged myself and I acquired CAD skills, Python, JavaScript coding, and mechanical wiring, participated in Hackathons, volunteered in outreach for people in need, and how to develop as an individual. I believe STEM can assist so many humans all across the world, particularly those in the healthcare sector, and save lives, just like mine. To my experience with a fatal disease and robotics, we must be willing to go beneath our familiarity, take chances, conquer problems, establish new foundations, and devise solutions to stitch up the wounds that are revealed, including both our own and the souls of those around us.
I ought to courageously investigate other individuals' conflicts, remain alongside them, and truly start to uncover solutions to ameliorate their suffering through the universalities of human consciousness. If we can embrace our diversity while focusing on what unites us, I strongly feel there will be greater peace and fewer instances of pain and misery. Kindness and empathy, when combined with research, technology and innovation, can completely transform well-being.