Hobbies and interests
Painting and Studio Art
Drawing And Illustration
Writing
Sewing
Fashion
Coding And Computer Science
Graphic Design
Animation
Reading
Young Adult
Adult Fiction
Contemporary
Biography
Romance
Art
Book Club
Childrens
Fantasy
Folk Tales
I read books daily
Juanita Hurtado
2,180
Bold Points4x
Nominee1x
FinalistJuanita Hurtado
2,180
Bold Points4x
Nominee1x
FinalistBio
Writer/Poet
Colombian Immigrant (Arrived two years ago)
Digital art artist
Bilingual (Spanish & English)
Reporter for the school's newspaper
Avid volunteer
Adaptable, disciplined, resilient.
Honor Roll student.
Blogger:
https://nosopinkconfessions.wixsite.com/rola
Education
thomas jefferson high school
High SchoolMiscellaneous
Desired degree level:
Master's degree program
Majors of interest:
- Communication, Journalism, and Related Programs, Other
- Journalism
- Communication and Media Studies, Other
- Design and Visual Communications, General
- Creative Writing
- Digital Communication and Media/Multimedia
Career
Dream career field:
Communication, journalism, and media
Dream career goals:
Editor-in-chief, publicist, reporter, writer
Summer Immersion Program
Girls Who Code2021 – Present3 yearsIntern for the Denver Youth Leadership Academy (Created a documentary about criminal justice in the U.S. with an emphasis in Colorado)
Young Invencibles in partnership with the Denver Metro Chamber of Commerce2020 – 2020Editor and youth contributor to the MoxieMag
Museum of Contemporary Art of Denver2020 – 20211 yearIntern for the POV program (Creation of a zine addressing different social issues)
Museum of Contemporary Art of Denver2019 – 2019Targeted Marketing (logos, graphics, advertisement, etc)
Boomers Leading Change2021 – 2021
Sports
Basketball
Intramural2013 – 20185 years
Awards
- No
Research
Corrections and Criminal Justice, Other
Young Invencibles in partnership with the Denver Metro Chamber of Commerce — Reporter (handle interviews, design questions, research) Poet (created intro and closure poem)2020 – 2020
Arts
Thomas Jefferson High School
Drawingshowcase2020 – 2021Thomas Jefferson High School
DanceSchool Performances and heritage day at Denver University2018 – 2020
Public services
Volunteering
Independent — read to the kids, help with totes2019 – 2020Volunteering
Denver Rescue Mission — Help discharge2019 – 2020Volunteering
Soles for Souls — volunteer2019 – 2020
Future Interests
Philanthropy
Entrepreneurship
Creative Expression Scholarship
Mirajur Rahman Self Expression Scholarship
Imagine Dragons Origins Scholarship
I long ago condemned myself to a constant state of yearning. I’m no longer just Colombian, nor American. I’m an immigrant.
My tongue speaks a “broken” language. Spanish with forgotten words; English never rolling off as is “supposed to” in my thick accent. Trips to the grocery store filled with quests to the international aisles and Mexican supermarkets. Revelry filled music and dances that cannot be replaced by hip hop or pop, walking down the school hallways feeling like an outcast -one or two friends at much the first year, all of them other immigrants. Jobs without diplomas for my parents and for lower wages because in the States they’ll earn more washing dishes than in Colombia as the bosses of importation companies; barely seeing them because they have shifts of twelve or eighteen hours; taking care of my sister and giving her the attention they couldn't give her. I remember crying those first months because I felt like drowning; I was not prepared to raise a toddler. There was so much pressure, so much fear, so much loneliness; I was tired and had no one to talk to -family in Colombia were already worried, my mom and stepdad were transitory figures, too tired to be anything else, and my friends had disappeared already. But we were here and falling wasn't an option; going back was not a possibility.
Now, I sometimes have these flashes of normalcy that last an instant. I think I can visit friends and family, that I’m home. And then I’m back in the huge buildings and empty streets. A sensation of wonder and melancholy filling me. Guiltily grateful for where I am. Behind is violence; behind is street harassment, the nonexistent opportunities for teenagers -no certainty about university, high rates of unemployment and poverty, not even a minimum wage for undergraduates- and the slaving jobs, the constant scandals about corruption, the apathy and complaint without action, the suffocating debts and loans, the avoidance to wear expensive things because there are thieves in every corner, the rarely heard protests, the bloodthirsty massacres. Behind is a culture of fear.
I’m guiltily grateful because it feels like I'm a coward. My loved ones should be safe too. But what can I say? Tell your parents to leave the jobs they studied years for to come wash bathrooms? Leave your family and friends behind to experience the same yearning I feel? Come endure the discrimination and stigma we try to think doesn't exist so your kids will able to go to college? Ran away from the mandatory militar service that will get you killed to work in construction or maintenance?
Neither option seems perfect because they both require us to give up something: status, comfort, loved ones, stability. In both countries we simply survive and the revelry of our people is the only thing to makes us feel alive. We can pursue the American dream that might leave us drained, or stay in Colombia where we might get killed. So we choose to believe home is the people; we make a place for ourselves in a country we'll always be foreign. We become immigrants. As one of them I decided long ago to study and create my own company (a book editorial or a publicity company) to give work to immigrants, then use the money I'll earn to go back and give my people the opportunities they never had. So they won’t have to run away, like I had to.
Empower Latin Youth Scholarship
I long ago condemned myself to a constant state of yearning. I’m no longer just Colombian, nor American. I’m an immigrant.
My tongue speaks a “broken” language. Spanish with forgotten words; English never rolling off as is “supposed to” in my thick accent. Trips to the grocery store filled with quests to the international aisles and Mexican supermarkets. Revelry filled music and dances that cannot be replaced by hip hop or pop.
Jobs without diplomas for my parents and for lower wages because in the states they’ll earn more washing dishes than in Colombia as the bosses of importation companies. Flashes of normalcy that last an instant. I think I can visit friends and family, that I’m home. But then I’m back in the huge buildings and empty streets. A sensation of wonder and melancholy filling me. Guiltily grateful for where I am.
Behind is violence; behind is street harassment, the nonexistent opportunities for teenagers -no certainty about university, high rates of unemployment and poverty, not even a minimum wage for undergraduates- and the slaving jobs, the constant scandals about corruption, the apathy and complaint without action, the suffocating debts and loans, the avoidance to wear expensive things because there are thieves in every corner, the rarely heard protests, the bloodthirsty massacres. Behind is a culture of fear.
I’m guiltily grateful because it feels like I'm a coward. They should be safe too. But what can I say? Tell your parents to leave the jobs they studied years for to come wash bathrooms? Leave your family and friends behind to experience the same yearning I feel? Come endure the discrimination and stigma we try to think doesn't exist so your kids will able to go to college? Ran away from the mandatory militar service that will get you killed to work in construction or maintenance?
Neither option seems perfect because they both require us to give up something: status, comfort, loved ones, stability. In both countries we simply survive and the revelry of our people is the only thing to makes us feel alive. We can pursue the American dream that might leave us drained, or stay in Colombia where we might get killed. So we choose to believe home is the people; we make a place for ourselves in a country we'll always be foreign. We become immigrants. I decided long ago to study and create my own publicity company to give work to immigrants and use that money to go back to fight for my people so they won’t have to run away, like I had to.