Hobbies and interests
Boxing
Biking And Cycling
Cars and Automotive Engineering
Gaming
Cooking
Reading
Chess
Exploring Nature And Being Outside
Hiking And Backpacking
Reading
Fantasy
Academic
Literary Fiction
Science Fiction
Social Science
I read books multiple times per week
Aidan Toombs
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WinnerAidan Toombs
485
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WinnerBio
Hi! I'm Aidan. My core goal in life right now is to become a psychiatrist specializing in children and adolescents. I've overcome my own struggles with mental illness and am passionate about making a difference. When I'm not doing school work you can catch me reading, working on my car, at the boxing gym, or riding my bike. I also love to cook and play video games from time to time. My dream college at the moment is either Colgate or TCU.
Education
Mansfield Lake Ridge High School
High SchoolGPA:
3.8
Miscellaneous
Desired degree level:
Doctoral degree program (PhD, MD, JD, etc.)
Majors of interest:
- Psychology, General
- Medicine
- Neurobiology and Neurosciences
Career
Dream career field:
Medicine
Dream career goals:
Bike Repair Technician
Bike Guy Bicycle Repair2018 – Present6 yearsCrewmember
Raising Cane's2020 – Present4 yearsCustomer Service Representative
Domino's Pizza2019 – 20201 year
Sports
Boxing
2020 – Present4 years
Research
- Present
Public services
Volunteering
Harvesting International Ministries — Car Loader2018 – 2021Volunteering
National Inventors Hall Of Fame — Leadership Intern2020 – 2022
Future Interests
Advocacy
Volunteering
Philanthropy
Brian J Boley Memorial Scholarship
Winner Throughout my life, I have struggled with autism, ADHD, unspecified mood disorder, depression, and anxiety. Coming to high school, I struggled to voice my growing emotional concerns to my doctors and loved ones. I became increasingly more dissociated from my emotions and the people around me, and worried that if I felt nothing for anything or anyone I would unwittingly harm people I was close to. Additionally, if my circumstances were left unaddressed how could I be expected to find motivation for long-term goals such as college and a career? However, despite my best efforts, no one understood what i was trying to say. The experience of going unheard by my support system and psychiatrist led me to begin self-medicating as early as 9th grade.
Throughout 9th grade, I experimented with substances including marijuana, LSD, and mushrooms. Initially, I saw these substances as "a way to have fun." However, by 10th and 11th grade I began to hear myself saying things like "I COULD stop if I really wanted to, but I just don't want to right now. What's the point?" while sitting across from my 'friends' while on a heavy dose of mushrooms. Over time, I began to realize that while I had no physical addiction to the drugs, I instead developed an emotional dependency. There was no way to have fun with friends if there wasn't at least one joint to pass around. In the end, the dull emotional state I sought to avoid was only being worsened by my substance abuse.
By 11th grade, I began to despair over my situation. I began to tell myself “I’ll be clean now,” only to then decide to “have fun one more time.” This sent me tumbling back into usage within weeks time and time again. I frequently got high and immediately regretted it. Trip anxiety tormented me. Every time I smoked, I spent long hours discussing how much I didn't want to do drugs anymore. Yet within weeks I would be right back at it.
I cannot pinpoint any particular moment where I finally set things right with myself. It was like I woke up one day and rather than constantly and actively resisting a compulsion, I simply had no DESIRE to do drugs. I can't imagine where I would be right now without that moment. As I'm writing this I have been drug-free for 1 year and 2 months.
However, this isn’t a cookie-cutter happy ending. I still struggle with my mental health. The same issues I faced in freshman year plague me to this day. Every waking moment feels like a constant active effort just to exist and yet I still don't turn to drugs. When I wake up feeling like there's no reason to leave my bed, or when that voice in my mind whispers “Just one hit wouldn't hurt,” I strive to remember one simple fact. As a child psychiatrist, working 8 hours a day, 6 days a week, means 48 one-hour sessions a week. That comes out to 192 opportunities a month for a kid who's struggling to talk to someone who understands what they're going through just a little bit more than anyone else they've ever talked to. That's 192 chances for me to help someone in need. That is where I’ve found my motivation.
I hope to pursue pre-medicine or psychology after graduation, with my end goal to be a psychiatrist specializing in children and adolescents. This scholarship would greatly support me in my endeavors to make a difference in the lives of those who are struggling with mental illness or addiction.