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Lucia LaBarre

1,465

Bold Points

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Finalist

Bio

The events of my past have inspired me and shaped who I am today. One night, when I was 5 years old, I was awoken by intense screaming. Upon entering my parents room, I vividly recall seeing a man so evil, his ill intentions could be seen through his eyes, forcefully telling my mother that he would kill her. My once strong and brave mother seemed terrified and weak. The man looked familiar. I murmured, “Daddy?” The man turned to me, his eyes softened as he spoke sweetly as if everything was at peace. I hardly noticed my mother leaving the room, but shortly after I heard the shuffling footsteps of police officers entering our home. That would be the last night my family was together. I spent the next years of my life living in constant fear and uncertainty. I learned things that a child should never have to know: code words that meant to call 911 and that safety drills were used for more than just tornadoes. As I got older, my mom was able to explain to me that my dad had a mental illness. That the doctors had put him on lots of medication, that he wasn’t supposed to drink alcohol on but he did. This created irreparable brain damage and is what caused his erratic behavior. I realized recently that I want to become a psychiatrist to help people like my dad. It was this realization that made me think back to what my mom once told me, “Lucia, I promise you even the darkest tragedies can have purpose” . I feel so blessed to have finally found the purpose of MY tragedy.

Education

Glenbard South High School

High School
2019 - 2023

Miscellaneous

  • Desired degree level:

    Doctoral degree program (PhD, MD, JD, etc.)

  • Majors of interest:

    • Neurobiology and Neurosciences
    • Psychology, General
    • Biological and Biomedical Sciences, Other
    • Clinical, Counseling and Applied Psychology
    • Biological/Biosystems Engineering
  • Planning to go to medical school
  • Career

    • Dream career field:

      Medicine

    • Dream career goals:

      psychology

      Sports

      Swimming

      Varsity
      2014 – 20195 years

      Arts

      • personal

        Drawing
        drawings in color
        2010 – Present

      Public services

      • Volunteering

        Key club — participant
        2020 – Present

      Future Interests

      Advocacy

      Volunteering

      Gabriel Martin Memorial Annual Scholarship
      My mom always told me, “Lucia, I promise you even the darkest tragedies can have purpose” Until recently, I didn’t put much weight in this. I thought it was just something adults said to shine light on tragedy. When I was three, I would have done anything to be like “Daddy”. He was my hero, a stay-at-home dad, and we were inseparable. I wanted to be just like him. But at 5, the dad I had started changing. Daddy was “napping’ more while Mommy was at work. He didn’t want to play with us anymore. One night, I was woken up by more loud screaming. I went into my parent’s room and I saw a man with the most evil eyes screaming at my mother that he would kill her. My once strong and brave mother seemed terrified and weak. The man looked familiar. I murmured, “Daddy?” The man turned to me, his eyes softened and he spoke sweetly to me as if nothing had happened. I hardly noticed Mommy leaving the room, but soon I heard the shuffling footsteps of police officers entering our house. That would be the last night my family was together. I spent the next few years of my life living in fear and uncertainty. I learned things that a child should never have to know: code words that meant to call 911, that safety drills were used for more than just tornadoes, and that I had something called PTSD. Despite all of this, I kept going. I thought I had finally put the past behind me, little did I know I would soon find it necessary to pull upon the strength and resilience I had learned as a child. In 2019, I entered high school taking math, science and English classes 2-4 years above my grade level. The beginning of my junior year, I qualified as a National Merit Hispanic Scholar. Then, in January of my Junior year, my world came crashing down once again. I went from a Type A, high functioning student, to a person in the midst of a manic episode with psychotic features. At that point, I had no idea I was bipolar, nor did I realize I had most likely inherited it from my father, who I then learned was also bipolar. The fight to control my mania and get proper medication was a long battle. It would take two inpatient hospital stays, three partial hospitalizations, three outpatient treatment programs, and five different psychiatrists to finally get my medication under control. I am finally at a place where I feel like I am triumphing over my bipolar. While in my third partial hospitalization program, I finally met the psychiatrist that would unlock the key to treating my bipolar. While other doctors were recommending I be placed in a residential program, Dr. Guitierez remained calm and saw in me what my parents and I could no longer see in myself. Within two months, I went from out-of-control manic to returning to school and getting straight A’s in all AP/ honors classes. Currently, I am in school full time, have a job teaching swim lessons and lifeguarding, and have been stable for the past six months. The experiences of my past have inspired me to become a psychiatrist to help people like myself and my dad. I am so excited about my future and making a difference in the world. It was this realization that made me think back to what my mom once told me. There was a purpose to my tragedy because I was strong enough to find one.
      Robert F. Lawson Fund for Careers that Care
      My mom always told me, “Lucia, I promise you even the darkest tragedies can have purpose” Until recently, I didn’t put much weight in this. I thought it was just something adults said to shine light on tragedy. When I was three, I would have done anything to be like “Daddy”. He was my hero, a stay-at-home dad, and we were inseparable. I wanted to be just like him. But at 5, the dad I had started changing. Daddy was “napping’ more while Mommy was at work. He didn’t want to play with us anymore. One night, I was woken up by more loud screaming. I went into my parent’s room and I saw a man with the most evil eyes screaming at my mother that he would kill her. My once strong and brave mother seemed terrified and weak. The man looked familiar. I murmured, “Daddy?” The man turned to me, his eyes softened and he spoke sweetly to me as if nothing had happened. I hardly noticed Mommy leaving the room, but soon I heard the shuffling footsteps of police officers entering our house. That would be the last night my family was together. I spent the next few years of my life living in fear and uncertainty. I learned things that a child should never have to know: code words that meant to call 911, that safety drills were used for more than just tornadoes, and that I had something called PTSD. Despite all of this, I kept going. I thought I had finally put the past behind me, little did I know I would soon find it necessary to pull upon the strength and resilience I had learned as a child. In 2019, I entered high school taking math, science and English classes 2-4 years above my grade level. The beginning of my junior year, I qualified as a National Merit Hispanic Scholar. Then, in January of my Junior year, my world came crashing down once again. I went from a Type A, high functioning student, to a person in the midst of a manic episode with psychotic features. At that point, I had no idea I was bipolar, nor did I realize I had most likely inherited it from my father, who I then learned was also bipolar. The fight to control my mania and get proper medication was a long battle. It would take two inpatient hospital stays, three partial hospitalizations, three outpatient treatment programs, and five different psychiatrists to finally get my medication under control. I am finally at a place where I feel like I am triumphing over my bipolar. While in my third partial hospitalization program, I finally met the psychiatrist that would unlock the key to treating my bipolar. While other doctors were recommending I be placed in a residential program, Dr. Guitierez remained calm and saw in me what my parents and I could no longer see in myself. Within two months, I went from out-of-control manic to returning to school and getting straight A’s in all AP/ honors classes. Currently, I am in school full time, have a job teaching swim lessons and lifeguarding, and have been stable for the past six months. The experiences of my past have inspired me to become a psychiatrist to help people like myself and my dad. I am so excited about my future and making a difference in the world. It was this realization that made me think back to what my mom once told me. There was a purpose to my tragedy because I was strong enough to find one.
      Elevate Mental Health Awareness Scholarship
      My mom always told me, “Lucia, I promise you even the darkest tragedies can have purpose” Until recently, I didn’t put much weight in this. I thought it was just something adults said to shine light on tragedy. When I was three, I would have done anything to be like “Daddy”. He was my hero, a stay at home dad, and we were inseparable. I wanted to be just like him, including the time I chopped off all my hair so I could have a short haircut just like him. My mom likes to share how I proudly walked through the door after my haircut and announced, “Now, I look beautiful just like Daddy!” But at 5, the dad I had started changing. Daddy was “napping’ more while Mommy was at work. He didn’t want to play with us anymore and told me he needed my help. At the time, my sister was only two and my brother was just an infant so I learned how to change diapers, make bottles, and read bedtime stories to my siblings. Meanwhile, his two hour “naps” turned into full days of laying on the coach. One night, I was woken up by more loud screaming. I went into my parent’s room and I saw a man with the most evil eyes screaming at my mother that he would kill her. My once strong and brave mother seemed terrified and weak. The man looked familiar. I murmured, “Daddy?” The man turned to me, his eyes softened and he spoke sweetly to me as if nothing had happened. I hardly noticed Mommy leaving the room, but soon I heard the shuffling footsteps of police officers entering our house. That would be the last night my family was together. I spent the next few years of my life living in fear and uncertainty. I learned things that a child should never have to know: code words that meant to call 911, that safety drills were used for more than just tornadoes, and that I had something called PTSD. Despite all of this, I kept going. With orders of protection in place and safety plans created, I returned to Kindergarten that Monday. When I would have bursts of anger, my mom would say “I love you and I’m sorry for what has happened, but I will not let what happened define you.” She would remind me of how I am the reason my siblings are safe, how I was a hero just like the one I once saw in my dad. I thought I had finally put the past behind me, little did I know I would soon find it necessary to pull upon the strength and resilience I had learned as a child. In 2019, I entered high school taking math, science and English classes 2-4 years above my grade level. The beginning of my junior year, I took the PSAT-NMSQT and qualified as a National Merit Hispanic Scholar. Then, in January of my Junior year, my world came crashing down once again. I went from a Type A, high functioning student, to a person in the midst of a manic episode with psychotic features. At that point, I had no idea I was bipolar, nor did I realize I had most likely inherited it from my father, who I then learned was also bipolar. The fight to control my mania and get proper medication was a long battle. It would take two inpatient hospital stays, three partial hospitalizations, three outpatient treatment programs, and five different psychiatrists to finally get my medication under control. I am finally at a place where I feel like I am finally triumphing over my bipolar. While in my third partial hospitalization program, I finally met the psychiatrist that would unlock the key to treating my bipolar. While other doctors were recommending I be placed in a residential program, Dr. Guitierez remained calm and saw in me what my parents and I could no longer see in myself. Within two months, I went from out of control manic to returning to school and getting straight A’s in all AP and honors classes. Currently I am in school full time, have a job teaching swim lessons and lifeguarding, and have been stable for the past four months. The experiences of my past have inspired me to become a psychiatrist to help people like myself and my dad. I applied and was admitted to the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign as a Neuroscience/Premed Major. I am so excited about my future and making a difference in the world. It was this realization that made me think back to what my mom once told me. There was a purpose to my tragedy because I was strong enough to find one.
      Grace Lynn Ross Memorial Scholarship
      My mom always told me, “Lucia, I promise you even the darkest tragedies can have purpose” Until recently, I didn’t put much weight in this. I thought it was just something adults said to shine light on tragedy. When I was three, I would have done anything to be like “Daddy”. He was my hero, a stay-at-home dad, and we were inseparable. I wanted to be just like him. But at 5, the dad I had started changing. Daddy was “napping’ more while Mommy was at work. He didn’t want to play with us anymore. One night, I was woken up by more loud screaming. I went into my parent’s room and I saw a man with the most evil eyes screaming at my mother that he would kill her. My once strong and brave mother seemed terrified and weak. The man looked familiar. I murmured, “Daddy?” The man turned to me, his eyes softened and he spoke sweetly to me as if nothing had happened. I hardly noticed Mommy leaving the room, but soon I heard the shuffling footsteps of police officers entering our house. That would be the last night my family was together. I spent the next few years of my life living in fear and uncertainty. I learned things that a child should never have to know: code words that meant to call 911, that safety drills were used for more than just tornadoes, and that I had something called PTSD. Despite all of this, I kept going. I thought I had finally put the past behind me, little did I know I would soon find it necessary to pull upon the strength and resilience I had learned as a child. In 2019, I entered high school taking math, science and English classes 2-4 years above my grade level. The beginning of my junior year, I qualified as a National Merit Hispanic Scholar. Then, in January of my Junior year, my world came crashing down once again. I went from a Type A, high functioning student, to a person in the midst of a manic episode with psychotic features. At that point, I had no idea I was bipolar, nor did I realize I had most likely inherited it from my father, who I then learned was also bipolar. The fight to control my mania and get proper medication was a long battle. It would take two inpatient hospital stays, three partial hospitalizations, three outpatient treatment programs, and five different psychiatrists to finally get my medication under control. I am finally at a place where I feel like I am triumphing over my bipolar. While in my third partial hospitalization program, I finally met the psychiatrist that would unlock the key to treating my bipolar. While other doctors were recommending I be placed in a residential program, Dr. Guitierez remained calm and saw in me what my parents and I could no longer see in myself. Within two months, I went from out-of-control manic to returning to school and getting straight A’s in all AP/ honors classes. Currently, I am in school full time, have a job teaching swim lessons and lifeguarding, and have been stable for the past four months. The experiences of my past have inspired me to become a psychiatrist to help people like myself and my dad. I am so excited about my future and making a difference in the world. It was this realization that made me think back to what my mom once told me. There was a purpose to my tragedy because I was strong enough to find one.
      Deborah Thomas Scholarship Award
      My mom always told me, “Lucia, I promise you even the darkest tragedies can have purpose” Until recently, I didn’t put much weight in this. I thought it was just something adults said to shine light on tragedy. When I was three, I would have done anything to be like “Daddy”. He was my hero, a stay-at-home dad, and we were inseparable. I wanted to be just like him. But at 5, the dad I had started changing. Daddy was “napping’ more while Mommy was at work. He didn’t want to play with us anymore. One night, I was woken up by more loud screaming. I went into my parent’s room and I saw a man with the most evil eyes screaming at my mother that he would kill her. My once strong and brave mother seemed terrified and weak. The man looked familiar. I murmured, “Daddy?” The man turned to me, his eyes softened and he spoke sweetly to me as if nothing had happened. I hardly noticed Mommy leaving the room, but soon I heard the shuffling footsteps of police officers entering our house. That would be the last night my family was together. I spent the next few years of my life living in fear and uncertainty. I learned things that a child should never have to know: code words that meant to call 911, that safety drills were used for more than just tornadoes, and that I had something called PTSD. Despite all of this, I kept going. I thought I had finally put the past behind me, little did I know I would soon find it necessary to pull upon the strength and resilience I had learned as a child. In 2019, I entered high school taking math, science and English classes 2-4 years above my grade level. The beginning of my junior year, I qualified as a National Merit Hispanic Scholar. Then, in January of my Junior year, my world came crashing down once again. I went from a Type A, high functioning student, to a person in the midst of a manic episode with psychotic features. At that point, I had no idea I was bipolar, nor did I realize I had most likely inherited it from my father, who I then learned was also bipolar. The fight to control my mania and get proper medication was a long battle. It would take two inpatient hospital stays, three partial hospitalizations, three outpatient treatment programs, and five different psychiatrists to finally get my medication under control. I am finally at a place where I feel like I am triumphing over my bipolar. While in my third partial hospitalization program, I finally met the psychiatrist that would unlock the key to treating my bipolar. While other doctors were recommending I be placed in a residential program, Dr. Guitierez remained calm and saw in me what my parents and I could no longer see in myself. Within two months, I went from out-of-control manic to returning to school and getting straight A’s in all AP/ honors classes. Currently, I am in school full time, have a job teaching swim lessons and lifeguarding, and have been stable for the past four months. The experiences of my past have inspired me to become a psychiatrist to help people like myself and my dad. I am so excited about my future and making a difference in the world. It was this realization that made me think back to what my mom once told me. There was a purpose to my tragedy because I was strong enough to find one.
      Yvela Michele Memorial Scholarship for Resilient Single Parents
      My mom always told me, “Lucia, I promise you even the darkest tragedies can have purpose” Until recently, I didn’t put much weight in this. I thought it was just something adults said to shine light on tragedy. When I was three, I would have done anything to be like “Daddy”. He was my hero, a stay-at-home dad, and we were inseparable. I wanted to be just like him. But at 5, the dad I had started changing. Daddy was “napping’ more while Mommy was at work. He didn’t want to play with us anymore. One night, I was woken up by more loud screaming. I went into my parent’s room and I saw a man with the most evil eyes screaming at my mother that he would kill her. My once strong and brave mother seemed terrified and weak. The man looked familiar. I murmured, “Daddy?” The man turned to me, his eyes softened and he spoke sweetly to me as if nothing had happened. I hardly noticed Mommy leaving the room, but soon I heard the shuffling footsteps of police officers entering our house. That would be the last night my family was together. I spent the next few years of my life living in fear and uncertainty. I learned things that a child should never have to know: code words that meant to call 911, that safety drills were used for more than just tornadoes, and that I had something called PTSD. Despite all of this, I kept going. I thought I had finally put the past behind me, little did I know I would soon find it necessary to pull upon the strength and resilience I had learned as a child. In 2019, I entered high school taking math, science and English classes 2-4 years above my grade level. The beginning of my junior year, I qualified as a National Merit Hispanic Scholar. Then, in January of my Junior year, my world came crashing down once again. I went from a Type A, high functioning student, to a person in the midst of a manic episode with psychotic features. At that point, I had no idea I was bipolar, nor did I realize I had most likely inherited it from my father, who I then learned was also bipolar. The fight to control my mania and get proper medication was a long battle. It would take two inpatient hospital stays, three partial hospitalizations, three outpatient treatment programs, and five different psychiatrists to finally get my medication under control. I am finally at a place where I feel like I am triumphing over my bipolar. While in my third partial hospitalization program, I finally met the psychiatrist that would unlock the key to treating my bipolar. While other doctors were recommending I be placed in a residential program, Dr. Guitierez remained calm and saw in me what my parents and I could no longer see in myself. Within two months, I went from out-of-control manic to returning to school and getting straight A’s in all AP/ honors classes. Currently, I am in school full time, have a job teaching swim lessons and lifeguarding, and have been stable for the past four months. The experiences of my past have inspired me to become a psychiatrist to help people like myself and my dad. I am so excited about my future and making a difference in the world. It was this realization that made me think back to what my mom once told me. There was a purpose to my tragedy because I was strong enough to find one.
      I Can Do Anything Scholarship
      My future self will be a leading psychiatrist in the country at the forefront of finding treatments for mental illness.
      Johnna's Legacy Memorial Scholarship
      My mom always told me, “Lucia, I promise you even the darkest tragedies can have purpose” Until recently, I didn’t put much weight in this. I thought it was just something adults said to shine light on tragedy. When I was three, I would have done anything to be like “Daddy”. He was my hero, a stay-at-home dad, and we were inseparable. I wanted to be just like him. But at 5, the dad I had started changing. Daddy was “napping’ more while Mommy was at work. He didn’t want to play with us anymore. One night, I was woken up by more loud screaming. I went into my parent’s room and I saw a man with the most evil eyes screaming at my mother that he would kill her. My once strong and brave mother seemed terrified and weak. The man looked familiar. I murmured, “Daddy?” The man turned to me, his eyes softened and he spoke sweetly to me as if nothing had happened. I hardly noticed Mommy leaving the room, but soon I heard the shuffling footsteps of police officers entering our house. That would be the last night my family was together. I spent the next few years of my life living in fear and uncertainty. I learned things that a child should never have to know: code words that meant to call 911, that safety drills were used for more than just tornadoes, and that I had something called PTSD. Despite all of this, I kept going. I thought I had finally put the past behind me, little did I know I would soon find it necessary to pull upon the strength and resilience I had learned as a child. In 2019, I entered high school taking math, science and English classes 2-4 years above my grade level. The beginning of my junior year, I qualified as a National Merit Hispanic Scholar. Then, in January of my Junior year, my world came crashing down once again. I went from a Type A, high functioning student, to a person in the midst of a manic episode with psychotic features. At that point, I had no idea I was bipolar, nor did I realize I had most likely inherited it from my father, who I then learned was also bipolar. The fight to control my mania and get proper medication was a long battle. It would take two inpatient hospital stays, three partial hospitalizations, three outpatient treatment programs, and five different psychiatrists to finally get my medication under control. I am finally at a place where I feel like I am triumphing over my bipolar. While in my third partial hospitalization program, I finally met the psychiatrist that would unlock the key to treating my bipolar. While other doctors were recommending I be placed in a residential program, Dr. Guitierez remained calm and saw in me what my parents and I could no longer see in myself. Within two months, I went from out-of-control manic to returning to school and getting straight A’s in all AP/ honors classes. Currently, I am in school full time, have a job teaching swim lessons and lifeguarding, and have been stable for the past four months. The experiences of my past have inspired me to become a psychiatrist to help people like myself and my dad. I am so excited about my future and making a difference in the world. It was this realization that made me think back to what my mom once told me. There was a purpose to my tragedy because I was strong enough to find one.
      Will Johnson Scholarship
      My mom always told me, “Lucia, I promise you even the darkest tragedies can have purpose” Until recently, I didn’t put much weight in this. I thought it was just something adults said to shine light on tragedy. When I was three, I would have done anything to be like “Daddy”. He was my hero, a stay-at-home dad, and we were inseparable. I wanted to be just like him. But at 5, the dad I had started changing. Daddy was “napping’ more while Mommy was at work. He didn’t want to play with us anymore. One night, I was woken up by more loud screaming. I went into my parent’s room and I saw a man with the most evil eyes screaming at my mother that he would kill her. My once strong and brave mother seemed terrified and weak. The man looked familiar. I murmured, “Daddy?” The man turned to me, his eyes softened and he spoke sweetly to me as if nothing had happened. I hardly noticed Mommy leaving the room, but soon I heard the shuffling footsteps of police officers entering our house. That would be the last night my family was together. I spent the next few years of my life living in fear and uncertainty. I learned things that a child should never have to know: code words that meant to call 911, that safety drills were used for more than just tornadoes, and that I had something called PTSD. Despite all of this, I kept going. I thought I had finally put the past behind me, little did I know I would soon find it necessary to pull upon the strength and resilience I had learned as a child. In 2019, I entered high school taking math, science and English classes 2-4 years above my grade level. The beginning of my junior year, I qualified as a National Merit Hispanic Scholar. Then, in January of my Junior year, my world came crashing down once again. I went from a Type A, high functioning student, to a person in the midst of a manic episode with psychotic features. At that point, I had no idea I was bipolar, nor did I realize I had most likely inherited it from my father, who I then learned was also bipolar. The fight to control my mania and get proper medication was a long battle. It would take two inpatient hospital stays, three partial hospitalizations, three outpatient treatment programs, and five different psychiatrists to finally get my medication under control. I am finally at a place where I feel like I am triumphing over my bipolar. While in my third partial hospitalization program, I finally met the psychiatrist that would unlock the key to treating my bipolar. While other doctors were recommending I be placed in a residential program, Dr. Guitierez remained calm and saw in me what my parents and I could no longer see in myself. Within two months, I went from out-of-control manic to returning to school and getting straight A’s in all AP/ honors classes. Currently, I am in school full time, have a job teaching swim lessons and lifeguarding, and have been stable for the past four months. The experiences of my past have inspired me to become a psychiatrist to help people like myself and my dad. I am so excited about my future and making a difference in the world. It was this realization that made me think back to what my mom once told me. There was a purpose to my tragedy because I was strong enough to find one.
      Charles Pulling Sr. Memorial Scholarship
      My mom always told me, “Lucia, I promise you even the darkest tragedies can have purpose” Until recently, I didn’t put much weight in this. I thought it was just something adults said to shine light on tragedy. When I was three, I would have done anything to be like “Daddy”. He was my hero, a stay-at-home dad, and we were inseparable. I wanted to be just like him. But at 5, the dad I had started changing. Daddy was “napping’ more while Mommy was at work. He didn’t want to play with us anymore. One night, I was woken up by more loud screaming. I went into my parent’s room and I saw a man with the most evil eyes screaming at my mother that he would kill her. My once strong and brave mother seemed terrified and weak. The man looked familiar. I murmured, “Daddy?” The man turned to me, his eyes softened and he spoke sweetly to me as if nothing had happened. I hardly noticed Mommy leaving the room, but soon I heard the shuffling footsteps of police officers entering our house. That would be the last night my family was together. I spent the next few years of my life living in fear and uncertainty. I learned things that a child should never have to know: code words that meant to call 911, that safety drills were used for more than just tornadoes, and that I had something called PTSD. Despite all of this, I kept going. I thought I had finally put the past behind me, little did I know I would soon find it necessary to pull upon the strength and resilience I had learned as a child. In 2019, I entered high school taking math, science and English classes 2-4 years above my grade level. The beginning of my junior year, I qualified as a National Merit Hispanic Scholar. Then, in January of my Junior year, my world came crashing down once again. I went from a Type A, high functioning student, to a person in the midst of a manic episode with psychotic features. At that point, I had no idea I was bipolar, nor did I realize I had most likely inherited it from my father, who I then learned was also bipolar. The fight to control my mania and get proper medication was a long battle. It would take two inpatient hospital stays, three partial hospitalizations, three outpatient treatment programs, and five different psychiatrists to finally get my medication under control. I am finally at a place where I feel like I am triumphing over my bipolar. While in my third partial hospitalization program, I finally met the psychiatrist that would unlock the key to treating my bipolar. While other doctors were recommending I be placed in a residential program, Dr. Guitierez remained calm and saw in me what my parents and I could no longer see in myself. Within two months, I went from out-of-control manic to returning to school and getting straight A’s in all AP/ honors classes. Currently, I am in school full time, have a job teaching swim lessons and lifeguarding, and have been stable for the past four months. The experiences of my past have inspired me to become a psychiatrist to help people like myself and my dad. I am so excited about my future and making a difference in the world. It was this realization that made me think back to what my mom once told me. There was a purpose to my tragedy because I was strong enough to find one.
      Our Destiny Our Future Scholarship
      My mom always told me, “Lucia, I promise you even the darkest tragedies can have purpose” Until recently, I didn’t put much weight in this. I thought it was just something adults said to shine light on tragedy. When I was three, I would have done anything to be like “Daddy”. He was my hero, a stay-at-home dad, and we were inseparable. I wanted to be just like him. But at 5, the dad I had started changing. Daddy was “napping’ more while Mommy was at work. He didn’t want to play with us anymore. One night, I was woken up by more loud screaming. I went into my parent’s room and I saw a man with the most evil eyes screaming at my mother that he would kill her. My once strong and brave mother seemed terrified and weak. The man looked familiar. I murmured, “Daddy?” The man turned to me, his eyes softened and he spoke sweetly to me as if nothing had happened. I hardly noticed Mommy leaving the room, but soon I heard the shuffling footsteps of police officers entering our house. That would be the last night my family was together. I spent the next few years of my life living in fear and uncertainty. I learned things that a child should never have to know: code words that meant to call 911, that safety drills were used for more than just tornadoes, and that I had something called PTSD. Despite all of this, I kept going. I thought I had finally put the past behind me, little did I know I would soon find it necessary to pull upon the strength and resilience I had learned as a child. In 2019, I entered high school taking math, science and English classes 2-4 years above my grade level. The beginning of my junior year, I qualified as a National Merit Hispanic Scholar. Then, in January of my Junior year, my world came crashing down once again. I went from a Type A, high functioning student, to a person in the midst of a manic episode with psychotic features. At that point, I had no idea I was bipolar, nor did I realize I had most likely inherited it from my father, who I then learned was also bipolar. The fight to control my mania and get proper medication was a long battle. It would take two inpatient hospital stays, three partial hospitalizations, three outpatient treatment programs, and five different psychiatrists to finally get my medication under control. I am finally at a place where I feel like I am triumphing over my bipolar. While in my third partial hospitalization program, I finally met the psychiatrist that would unlock the key to treating my bipolar. While other doctors were recommending I be placed in a residential program, Dr. Guitierez remained calm and saw in me what my parents and I could no longer see in myself. Within two months, I went from out-of-control manic to returning to school and getting straight A’s in all AP/ honors classes. Currently, I am in school full time, have a job teaching swim lessons and lifeguarding, and have been stable for the past four months. The experiences of my past have inspired me to become a psychiatrist to help people like myself and my dad. I am so excited about my future and making a difference in the world. It was this realization that made me think back to what my mom once told me. There was a purpose to my tragedy because I was strong enough to find one.
      Ruth Hazel Scruggs King Scholarship
      My mom always told me, “Lucia, I promise you even the darkest tragedies can have purpose” Until recently, I didn’t put much weight in this. I thought it was just something adults said to shine light on tragedy. When I was three, I would have done anything to be like “Daddy”. He was my hero, a stay-at-home dad, and we were inseparable. I wanted to be just like him. But at 5, the dad I had started changing. Daddy was “napping’ more while Mommy was at work. He didn’t want to play with us anymore. One night, I was woken up by more loud screaming. I went into my parent’s room and I saw a man with the most evil eyes screaming at my mother that he would kill her. My once strong and brave mother seemed terrified and weak. The man looked familiar. I murmured, “Daddy?” The man turned to me, his eyes softened and he spoke sweetly to me as if nothing had happened. I hardly noticed Mommy leaving the room, but soon I heard the shuffling footsteps of police officers entering our house. That would be the last night my family was together. I spent the next few years of my life living in fear and uncertainty. I learned things that a child should never have to know: code words that meant to call 911, that safety drills were used for more than just tornadoes, and that I had something called PTSD. Despite all of this, I kept going. I thought I had finally put the past behind me, little did I know I would soon find it necessary to pull upon the strength and resilience I had learned as a child. In 2019, I entered high school taking math, science and English classes 2-4 years above my grade level. The beginning of my junior year, I qualified as a National Merit Hispanic Scholar. Then, in January of my Junior year, my world came crashing down once again. I went from a Type A, high functioning student, to a person in the midst of a manic episode with psychotic features. At that point, I had no idea I was bipolar, nor did I realize I had most likely inherited it from my father, who I then learned was also bipolar. The fight to control my mania and get proper medication was a long battle. It would take two inpatient hospital stays, three partial hospitalizations, three outpatient treatment programs, and five different psychiatrists to finally get my medication under control. I am finally at a place where I feel like I am triumphing over my bipolar. While in my third partial hospitalization program, I finally met the psychiatrist that would unlock the key to treating my bipolar. While other doctors were recommending I be placed in a residential program, Dr. Guitierez remained calm and saw in me what my parents and I could no longer see in myself. Within two months, I went from out-of-control manic to returning to school and getting straight A’s in all AP/ honors classes. Currently, I am in school full time, have a job teaching swim lessons and lifeguarding, and have been stable for the past four months. The experiences of my past have inspired me to become a psychiatrist to help people like myself and my dad. I am so excited about my future and making a difference in the world. It was this realization that made me think back to what my mom once told me. There was a purpose to my tragedy because I was strong enough to find one.
      Trever David Clark Memorial Scholarship
      My mom always told me, “Lucia, I promise you even the darkest tragedies can have purpose” Until recently, I didn’t put much weight in this. I thought it was just something adults said to shine light on tragedy. When I was three, I would have done anything to be like “Daddy”. He was my hero, a stay-at-home dad, and we were inseparable. I wanted to be just like him. But at 5, the dad I had started changing. Daddy was “napping’ more while Mommy was at work. He didn’t want to play with us anymore. One night, I was woken up by more loud screaming. I went into my parent’s room and I saw a man with the most evil eyes screaming at my mother that he would kill her. My once strong and brave mother seemed terrified and weak. The man looked familiar. I murmured, “Daddy?” The man turned to me, his eyes softened and he spoke sweetly to me as if nothing had happened. I hardly noticed Mommy leaving the room, but soon I heard the shuffling footsteps of police officers entering our house. That would be the last night my family was together. I spent the next few years of my life living in fear and uncertainty. I learned things that a child should never have to know: code words that meant to call 911, that safety drills were used for more than just tornadoes, and that I had something called PTSD. Despite all of this, I kept going. I thought I had finally put the past behind me, little did I know I would soon find it necessary to pull upon the strength and resilience I had learned as a child. In 2019, I entered high school taking math, science and English classes 2-4 years above my grade level. The beginning of my junior year, I qualified as a National Merit Hispanic Scholar. Then, in January of my Junior year, my world came crashing down once again. I went from a Type A, high functioning student, to a person in the midst of a manic episode with psychotic features. At that point, I had no idea I was bipolar, nor did I realize I had most likely inherited it from my father, who I then learned was also bipolar. The fight to control my mania and get proper medication was a long battle. It would take two inpatient hospital stays, three partial hospitalizations, three outpatient treatment programs, and five different psychiatrists to finally get my medication under control. I am finally at a place where I feel like I am triumphing over my bipolar. While in my third partial hospitalization program, I finally met the psychiatrist that would unlock the key to treating my bipolar. While other doctors were recommending I be placed in a residential program, Dr. Guitierez remained calm and saw in me what my parents and I could no longer see in myself. Within two months, I went from out-of-control manic to returning to school and getting straight A’s in all AP/ honors classes. Currently, I am in school full time, have a job teaching swim lessons and lifeguarding, and have been stable for the past four months. The experiences of my past have inspired me to become a psychiatrist to help people like myself and my dad. I am so excited about my future and making a difference in the world. It was this realization that made me think back to what my mom once told me. There was a purpose to my tragedy because I was strong enough to find one.
      Kiaan Patel Scholarship
      My mom always told me, “Lucia, I promise you even the darkest tragedies can have purpose” Until recently, I didn’t put much weight in this. I thought it was just something adults said to shine light on tragedy. When I was three, I would have done anything to be like “Daddy”. He was my hero, a stay-at-home dad, and we were inseparable. I wanted to be just like him. But at 5, the dad I had started changing. Daddy was “napping’ more while Mommy was at work. He didn’t want to play with us anymore. One night, I was woken up by more loud screaming. I went into my parent’s room and I saw a man with the most evil eyes screaming at my mother that he would kill her. My once strong and brave mother seemed terrified and weak. The man looked familiar. I murmured, “Daddy?” The man turned to me, his eyes softened and he spoke sweetly to me as if nothing had happened. I hardly noticed Mommy leaving the room, but soon I heard the shuffling footsteps of police officers entering our house. That would be the last night my family was together. I spent the next few years of my life living in fear and uncertainty. I learned things that a child should never have to know: code words that meant to call 911, that safety drills were used for more than just tornadoes, and that I had something called PTSD. Despite all of this, I kept going. I thought I had finally put the past behind me, little did I know I would soon find it necessary to pull upon the strength and resilience I had learned as a child. In 2019, I entered high school taking math, science and English classes 2-4 years above my grade level. The beginning of my junior year, I qualified as a National Merit Hispanic Scholar. Then, in January of my Junior year, my world came crashing down once again. I went from a Type A, high functioning student, to a person in the midst of a manic episode with psychotic features. At that point, I had no idea I was bipolar, nor did I realize I had most likely inherited it from my father, who I then learned was also bipolar. The fight to control my mania and get proper medication was a long battle. It would take two inpatient hospital stays, three partial hospitalizations, three outpatient treatment programs, and five different psychiatrists to finally get my medication under control. I am finally at a place where I feel like I am triumphing over my bipolar. While in my third partial hospitalization program, I finally met the psychiatrist that would unlock the key to treating my bipolar. While other doctors were recommending I be placed in a residential program, Dr. Guitierez remained calm and saw in me what my parents and I could no longer see in myself. Within two months, I went from out-of-control manic to returning to school and getting straight A’s in all AP/ honors classes. Currently, I am in school full time, have a job teaching swim lessons and lifeguarding, and have been stable for the past four months. The experiences of my past have inspired me to become a psychiatrist to help people like myself and my dad. I am so excited about my future and making a difference in the world. It was this realization that made me think back to what my mom once told me. There was a purpose to my tragedy because I was strong enough to find one.
      North Star Dreamers Memorial Scholarship
      My mom always told me, “Lucia, I promise you even the darkest tragedies can have purpose” Until recently, I didn’t put much weight in this. I thought it was just something adults said to shine light on tragedy. When I was three, I would have done anything to be like “Daddy”. He was my hero, a stay-at-home dad, and we were inseparable. I wanted to be just like him. But at 5, the dad I had started changing. Daddy was “napping’ more while Mommy was at work. He didn’t want to play with us anymore. One night, I was woken up by more loud screaming. I went into my parent’s room and I saw a man with the most evil eyes screaming at my mother that he would kill her. My once strong and brave mother seemed terrified and weak. The man looked familiar. I murmured, “Daddy?” The man turned to me, his eyes softened and he spoke sweetly to me as if nothing had happened. I hardly noticed Mommy leaving the room, but soon I heard the shuffling footsteps of police officers entering our house. That would be the last night my family was together. I spent the next few years of my life living in fear and uncertainty. I learned things that a child should never have to know: code words that meant to call 911, that safety drills were used for more than just tornadoes, and that I had something called PTSD. Despite all of this, I kept going. I thought I had finally put the past behind me, little did I know I would soon find it necessary to pull upon the strength and resilience I had learned as a child. In 2019, I entered high school taking math, science and English classes 2-4 years above my grade level. The beginning of my junior year, I qualified as a National Merit Hispanic Scholar. Then, in January of my Junior year, my world came crashing down once again. I went from a Type A, high functioning student, to a person in the midst of a manic episode with psychotic features. At that point, I had no idea I was bipolar, nor did I realize I had most likely inherited it from my father, who I then learned was also bipolar. The fight to control my mania and get proper medication was a long battle. It would take two inpatient hospital stays, three partial hospitalizations, three outpatient treatment programs, and five different psychiatrists to finally get my medication under control. I am finally at a place where I feel like I am triumphing over my bipolar. While in my third partial hospitalization program, I finally met the psychiatrist that would unlock the key to treating my bipolar. While other doctors were recommending I be placed in a residential program, Dr. Guitierez remained calm and saw in me what my parents and I could no longer see in myself. Within two months, I went from out-of-control manic to returning to school and getting straight A’s in all AP/ honors classes. Currently, I am in school full time, have a job teaching swim lessons and lifeguarding, and have been stable for the past four months. The experiences of my past have inspired me to become a psychiatrist to help people like myself and my dad. I am so excited about my future and making a difference in the world. It was this realization that made me think back to what my mom once told me. There was a purpose to my tragedy because I was strong enough to find one.
      Strength in Neurodiversity Scholarship
      My mom always told me, “Lucia, I promise you even the darkest tragedies can have purpose” Until recently, I didn’t put much weight in this. I thought it was just something adults said to shine light on tragedy. When I was three, I would have done anything to be like “Daddy”. He was my hero, a stay-at-home dad, and we were inseparable. I wanted to be just like him. But at 5, the dad I had started changing. Daddy was “napping’ more while Mommy was at work. He didn’t want to play with us anymore. One night, I was woken up by more loud screaming. I went into my parent’s room and I saw a man with the most evil eyes screaming at my mother that he would kill her. My once strong and brave mother seemed terrified and weak. The man looked familiar. I murmured, “Daddy?” The man turned to me, his eyes softened and he spoke sweetly to me as if nothing had happened. I hardly noticed Mommy leaving the room, but soon I heard the shuffling footsteps of police officers entering our house. That would be the last night my family was together. I spent the next few years of my life living in fear and uncertainty. I learned things that a child should never have to know: code words that meant to call 911, that safety drills were used for more than just tornadoes, and that I had something called PTSD. Despite all of this, I kept going. I thought I had finally put the past behind me, little did I know I would soon find it necessary to pull upon the strength and resilience I had learned as a child. In 2019, I entered high school taking math, science and English classes 2-4 years above my grade level. The beginning of my junior year, I qualified as a National Merit Hispanic Scholar. Then, in January of my Junior year, my world came crashing down once again. I went from a Type A, high functioning student, to a person in the midst of a manic episode with psychotic features. At that point, I had no idea I was bipolar, nor did I realize I had most likely inherited it from my father, who I then learned was also bipolar. The fight to control my mania and get proper medication was a long battle. It would take two inpatient hospital stays, three partial hospitalizations, three outpatient treatment programs, and five different psychiatrists to finally get my medication under control. I am finally at a place where I feel like I am triumphing over my bipolar. While in my third partial hospitalization program, I finally met the psychiatrist that would unlock the key to treating my bipolar. While other doctors were recommending I be placed in a residential program, Dr. Guitierez remained calm and saw in me what my parents and I could no longer see in myself. Within two months, I went from out-of-control manic to returning to school and getting straight A’s in all AP/ honors classes. Currently, I am in school full time, have a job teaching swim lessons and lifeguarding, and have been stable for the past four months. The experiences of my past have inspired me to become a psychiatrist to help people like myself and my dad. I am so excited about my future and making a difference in the world. It was this realization that made me think back to what my mom once told me. There was a purpose to my tragedy because I was strong enough to find one.
      Rose Ifebigh Memorial Scholarship
      My mom always told me, “Lucia, I promise you even the darkest tragedies can have purpose” Until recently, I didn’t put much weight in this. I thought it was just something adults said to shine light on tragedy. When I was three, I would have done anything to be like “Daddy”. He was my hero, a stay-at-home dad, and we were inseparable. I wanted to be just like him. But at 5, the dad I had started changing. Daddy was “napping’ more while Mommy was at work. He didn’t want to play with us anymore. One night, I was woken up by more loud screaming. I went into my parent’s room and I saw a man with the most evil eyes screaming at my mother that he would kill her. My once strong and brave mother seemed terrified and weak. The man looked familiar. I murmured, “Daddy?” The man turned to me, his eyes softened and he spoke sweetly to me as if nothing had happened. I hardly noticed Mommy leaving the room, but soon I heard the shuffling footsteps of police officers entering our house. That would be the last night my family was together. I spent the next few years of my life living in fear and uncertainty. I learned things that a child should never have to know: code words that meant to call 911, that safety drills were used for more than just tornadoes, and that I had something called PTSD. Despite all of this, I kept going. I thought I had finally put the past behind me, little did I know I would soon find it necessary to pull upon the strength and resilience I had learned as a child. In 2019, I entered high school taking math, science and English classes 2-4 years above my grade level. The beginning of my junior year, I qualified as a National Merit Hispanic Scholar. Then, in January of my Junior year, my world came crashing down once again. I went from a Type A, high functioning student, to a person in the midst of a manic episode with psychotic features. At that point, I had no idea I was bipolar, nor did I realize I had most likely inherited it from my father, who I then learned was also bipolar. The fight to control my mania and get proper medication was a long battle. It would take two inpatient hospital stays, three partial hospitalizations, three outpatient treatment programs, and five different psychiatrists to finally get my medication under control. I am finally at a place where I feel like I am triumphing over my bipolar. While in my third partial hospitalization program, I finally met the psychiatrist that would unlock the key to treating my bipolar. While other doctors were recommending I be placed in a residential program, Dr. Guitierez remained calm and saw in me what my parents and I could no longer see in myself. Within two months, I went from out-of-control manic to returning to school and getting straight A’s in all AP/ honors classes. Currently, I am in school full time, have a job teaching swim lessons and lifeguarding, and have been stable for the past four months. The experiences of my past have inspired me to become a psychiatrist to help people like myself and my dad. I am so excited about my future and making a difference in the world. It was this realization that made me think back to what my mom once told me. There was a purpose to my tragedy because I was strong enough to find one.
      Hilliard L. "Tack" Gibbs Jr. Memorial Scholarship
      My mom always told me, “Lucia, I promise you even the darkest tragedies can have purpose” Until recently, I didn’t put much weight in this. I thought it was just something adults said to shine light on tragedy. When I was three, I would have done anything to be like “Daddy”. He was my hero, a stay-at-home dad, and we were inseparable. I wanted to be just like him. But at 5, the dad I had started changing. Daddy was “napping’ more while Mommy was at work. He didn’t want to play with us anymore. One night, I was woken up by more loud screaming. I went into my parent’s room and I saw a man with the most evil eyes screaming at my mother that he would kill her. My once strong and brave mother seemed terrified and weak. The man looked familiar. I murmured, “Daddy?” The man turned to me, his eyes softened and he spoke sweetly to me as if nothing had happened. I hardly noticed Mommy leaving the room, but soon I heard the shuffling footsteps of police officers entering our house. That would be the last night my family was together. I spent the next few years of my life living in fear and uncertainty. I learned things that a child should never have to know: code words that meant to call 911, that safety drills were used for more than just tornadoes, and that I had something called PTSD. Despite all of this, I kept going. I thought I had finally put the past behind me, little did I know I would soon find it necessary to pull upon the strength and resilience I had learned as a child. In 2019, I entered high school taking math, science and English classes 2-4 years above my grade level. The beginning of my junior year, I qualified as a National Merit Hispanic Scholar. Then, in January of my Junior year, my world came crashing down once again. I went from a Type A, high functioning student, to a person in the midst of a manic episode with psychotic features. At that point, I had no idea I was bipolar, nor did I realize I had most likely inherited it from my father, who I then learned was also bipolar. The fight to control my mania and get proper medication was a long battle. It would take two inpatient hospital stays, three partial hospitalizations, three outpatient treatment programs, and five different psychiatrists to finally get my medication under control. I am finally at a place where I feel like I am triumphing over my bipolar. While in my third partial hospitalization program, I finally met the psychiatrist that would unlock the key to treating my bipolar. While other doctors were recommending I be placed in a residential program, Dr. Guitierez remained calm and saw in me what my parents and I could no longer see in myself. Within two months, I went from out-of-control manic to returning to school and getting straight A’s in all AP/ honors classes. Currently, I am in school full time, have a job teaching swim lessons and lifeguarding, and have been stable for the past four months. The experiences of my past have inspired me to become a psychiatrist to help people like myself and my dad. I am so excited about my future and making a difference in the world. It was this realization that made me think back to what my mom once told me. There was a purpose to my tragedy because I was strong enough to find one.
      Students Impacted by Incarceration Scholarship
      My mom always told me, “Lucia, I promise you even the darkest tragedies can have purpose” Until recently, I didn’t put much weight in this. I thought it was just something adults said to shine light on tragedy. When I was three, I would have done anything to be like “Daddy”. He was my hero, a stay-at-home dad, and we were inseparable. I wanted to be just like him. But at 5, the dad I had started changing. Daddy was “napping’ more while Mommy was at work. He didn’t want to play with us anymore. One night, I was woken up by more loud screaming. I went into my parent’s room and I saw a man with the most evil eyes screaming at my mother that he would kill her. My once strong and brave mother seemed terrified and weak. The man looked familiar. I murmured, “Daddy?” The man turned to me, his eyes softened and he spoke sweetly to me as if nothing had happened. I hardly noticed Mommy leaving the room, but soon I heard the shuffling footsteps of police officers entering our house. That would be the last night my family was together. I spent the next few years of my life living in fear and uncertainty. I learned things that a child should never have to know: code words that meant to call 911, that safety drills were used for more than just tornadoes, and that I had something called PTSD. Despite all of this, I kept going. The experiences of my past have inspired me to become a psychiatrist to help people like myself and my dad. I am so excited about my future and making a difference in the world. It was this realization that made me think back to what my mom once told me. There was a purpose to my tragedy because I was strong enough to find one.
      DV Awareness Scholarship in Memory of Teresa Cox, Rhonda Cox and Jimmie Neal
      My mom always told me, “Lucia, I promise you even the darkest tragedies can have purpose” Until recently, I didn’t put much weight in this. I thought it was just something adults said to shine light on tragedy. When I was three, I would have done anything to be like “Daddy”. He was my hero, a stay-at-home dad, and we were inseparable. I wanted to be just like him. But at 5, the dad I had started changing. Daddy was “napping’ more while Mommy was at work. He didn’t want to play with us anymore. One night, I was woken up by more loud screaming. I went into my parent’s room and I saw a man with the most evil eyes screaming at my mother that he would kill her. My once strong and brave mother seemed terrified and weak. The man looked familiar. I murmured, “Daddy?” The man turned to me, his eyes softened and he spoke sweetly to me as if nothing had happened. I hardly noticed Mommy leaving the room, but soon I heard the shuffling footsteps of police officers entering our house. That would be the last night my family was together. I spent the next few years of my life living in fear and uncertainty. I learned things that a child should never have to know: code words that meant to call 911, that safety drills were used for more than just tornadoes, and that I had something called PTSD. Despite all of this, I kept going. I thought I had finally put the past behind me, little did I know I would soon find it necessary to pull upon the strength and resilience I had learned as a child. In 2019, I entered high school taking math, science and English classes 2-4 years above my grade level. The beginning of my junior year, I qualified as a National Merit Hispanic Scholar. Then, in January of my Junior year, my world came crashing down once again. I went from a Type A, high functioning student, to a person in the midst of a manic episode with psychotic features. At that point, I had no idea I was bipolar, nor did I realize I had most likely inherited it from my father, who I then learned was also bipolar. The fight to control my mania and get proper medication was a long battle. It would take two inpatient hospital stays, three partial hospitalizations, three outpatient treatment programs, and five different psychiatrists to finally get my medication under control. I am finally at a place where I feel like I am triumphing over my bipolar. While in my third partial hospitalization program, I finally met the psychiatrist that would unlock the key to treating my bipolar. While other doctors were recommending I be placed in a residential program, Dr. Guitierez remained calm and saw in me what my parents and I could no longer see in myself. Within two months, I went from out-of-control manic to returning to school and getting straight A’s in all AP/ honors classes. Currently, I am in school full time, have a job teaching swim lessons and lifeguarding, and have been stable for the past four months. The experiences of my past have inspired me to become a psychiatrist to help people like myself and my dad. I am so excited about my future and making a difference in the world. It was this realization that made me think back to what my mom once told me. There was a purpose to my tragedy because I was strong enough to find one.
      Overcoming Adversity - Jack Terry Memorial Scholarship
      My mom always told me, “Lucia, I promise you even the darkest tragedies can have purpose” Until recently, I didn’t put much weight in this. I thought it was just something adults said to shine light on tragedy. When I was three, I would have done anything to be like “Daddy”. He was my hero, a stay-at-home dad, and we were inseparable. I wanted to be just like him. But at 5, the dad I had started changing. Daddy was “napping’ more while Mommy was at work. He didn’t want to play with us anymore. One night, I was woken up by more loud screaming. I went into my parent’s room and I saw a man with the most evil eyes screaming at my mother that he would kill her. My once strong and brave mother seemed terrified and weak. The man looked familiar. I murmured, “Daddy?” The man turned to me, his eyes softened and he spoke sweetly to me as if nothing had happened. I hardly noticed Mommy leaving the room, but soon I heard the shuffling footsteps of police officers entering our house. That would be the last night my family was together. I spent the next few years of my life living in fear and uncertainty. I learned things that a child should never have to know: code words that meant to call 911, that safety drills were used for more than just tornadoes, and that I had something called PTSD. Despite all of this, I kept going. I thought I had finally put the past behind me, little did I know I would soon find it necessary to pull upon the strength and resilience I had learned as a child. In 2019, I entered high school taking math, science and English classes 2-4 years above my grade level. The beginning of my junior year, I qualified as a National Merit Hispanic Scholar. Then, in January of my Junior year, my world came crashing down once again. I went from a Type A, high functioning student, to a person in the midst of a manic episode with psychotic features. At that point, I had no idea I was bipolar, nor did I realize I had most likely inherited it from my father, who I then learned was also bipolar. The fight to control my mania and get proper medication was a long battle. It would take two inpatient hospital stays, three partial hospitalizations, three outpatient treatment programs, and five different psychiatrists to finally get my medication under control. I am finally at a place where I feel like I am triumphing over my bipolar. While in my third partial hospitalization program, I finally met the psychiatrist that would unlock the key to treating my bipolar. While other doctors were recommending I be placed in a residential program, Dr. Guitierez remained calm and saw in me what my parents and I could no longer see in myself. Within two months, I went from out-of-control manic to returning to school and getting straight A’s in all AP/ honors classes. Currently, I am in school full time, have a job teaching swim lessons and lifeguarding, and have been stable for the past four months. The experiences of my past have inspired me to become a psychiatrist to help people like myself and my dad. I am so excited about my future and making a difference in the world. It was this realization that made me think back to what my mom once told me. There was a purpose to my tragedy because I was strong enough to find one.
      Connie Konatsotis Scholarship
      My mom always told me, “Lucia, I promise you even the darkest tragedies can have purpose” Until recently, I didn’t put much weight in this. I thought it was just something adults said to shine light on tragedy. When I was three, I would have done anything to be like “Daddy”. He was my hero, a stay-at-home dad, and we were inseparable. I wanted to be just like him. But at 5, the dad I had started changing. Daddy was “napping’ more while Mommy was at work. He didn’t want to play with us anymore. One night, I was woken up by more loud screaming. I went into my parent’s room and I saw a man with the most evil eyes screaming at my mother that he would kill her. My once strong and brave mother seemed terrified and weak. The man looked familiar. I murmured, “Daddy?” The man turned to me, his eyes softened and he spoke sweetly to me as if nothing had happened. I hardly noticed Mommy leaving the room, but soon I heard the shuffling footsteps of police officers entering our house. That would be the last night my family was together. I spent the next few years of my life living in fear and uncertainty. I learned things that a child should never have to know: code words that meant to call 911, that safety drills were used for more than just tornadoes, and that I had something called PTSD. Despite all of this, I kept going. I thought I had finally put the past behind me, little did I know I would soon find it necessary to pull upon the strength and resilience I had learned as a child. In 2019, I entered high school taking math, science and English classes 2-4 years above my grade level. The beginning of my junior year, I qualified as a National Merit Hispanic Scholar. Then, in January of my Junior year, my world came crashing down once again. I went from a Type A, high functioning student, to a person in the midst of a manic episode with psychotic features. At that point, I had no idea I was bipolar, nor did I realize I had most likely inherited it from my father, who I then learned was also bipolar. The fight to control my mania and get proper medication was a long battle. It would take two inpatient hospital stays, three partial hospitalizations, three outpatient treatment programs, and five different psychiatrists to finally get my medication under control. I am finally at a place where I feel like I am triumphing over my bipolar. While in my third partial hospitalization program, I finally met the psychiatrist that would unlock the key to treating my bipolar. While other doctors were recommending I be placed in a residential program, Dr. Guitierez remained calm and saw in me what my parents and I could no longer see in myself. Within two months, I went from out-of-control manic to returning to school and getting straight A’s in all AP/ honors classes. Currently, I am in school full time, have a job teaching swim lessons and lifeguarding, and have been stable for the past four months. The experiences of my past have inspired me to become a psychiatrist to help people like myself and my dad. I am so excited about my future and making a difference in the world. It was this realization that made me think back to what my mom once told me. There was a purpose to my tragedy because I was strong enough to find one.
      Young Women in STEM Scholarship
      My mom always told me, “Lucia, I promise you even the darkest tragedies can have purpose” Until recently, I didn’t put much weight in this. I thought it was just something adults said to shine light on tragedy. When I was three, I would have done anything to be like “Daddy”. He was my hero, a stay at home dad, and we were inseparable. I wanted to be just like him, including the time I chopped off all my hair so I could have a short haircut just like him. My mom likes to share how I proudly walked through the door after my haircut and announced, “Now, I look beautiful just like Daddy!” But at 5, the dad I had started changing. Daddy was “napping’ more while Mommy was at work. He didn’t want to play with us anymore and told me he needed my help. At the time, my sister was only two and my brother was just an infant so I learned how to change diapers, make bottles, and read bedtime stories to my siblings. Meanwhile, his two hour “naps” turned into full days of laying on the coach. One night, I was woken up by more loud screaming. I went into my parent’s room and I saw a man with the most evil eyes screaming at my mother that he would kill her. My once strong and brave mother seemed terrified and weak. The man looked familiar. I murmured, “Daddy?” The man turned to me, his eyes softened and he spoke sweetly to me as if nothing had happened. I hardly noticed Mommy leaving the room, but soon I heard the shuffling footsteps of police officers entering our house. That would be the last night my family was together. I spent the next few years of my life living in fear and uncertainty. I learned things that a child should never have to know: code words that meant to call 911, that safety drills were used for more than just tornadoes, and that I had something called PTSD. Despite all of this, I kept going. With orders of protection in place and safety plans created, I returned to Kindergarten that Monday. When I would have bursts of anger, my mom would say “I love you and I’m sorry for what has happened, but I will not let what happened define you.” She would remind me of how I am the reason my siblings are safe, how I was a hero just like the one I once saw in my dad. I thought I had finally put the past behind me, little did I know I would soon find it necessary to pull upon the strength and resilience I had learned as a child. In 2019, I entered high school taking math, science and English classes 2-4 years above my grade level. The beginning of my junior year, I took the PSAT-NMSQT and qualified as a National Merit Hispanic Scholar. Then, in January of my Junior year, my world came crashing down once again. I went from a Type A, high functioning student, to a person in the midst of a manic episode with psychotic features. At that point, I had no idea I was bipolar, nor did I realize I had most likely inherited it from my father, who I then learned was also bipolar. The fight to control my mania and get proper medication was a long battle. It would take two inpatient hospital stays, three partial hospitalizations, three outpatient treatment programs, and five different psychiatrists to finally get my medication under control. I am finally at a place where I feel like I am finally triumphing over my bipolar. While in my third partial hospitalization program, I finally met the psychiatrist that would unlock the key to treating my bipolar. While other doctors were recommending I be placed in a residential program, Dr. Guitierez remained calm and saw in me what my parents and I could no longer see in myself. Within two months, I went from out of control manic to returning to school and getting straight A’s in all AP and honors classes. Currently I am in school full time, have a job teaching swim lessons and lifeguarding, and have been stable for the past four months. The experiences of my past have inspired me to become a psychiatrist to help people like myself and my dad. I applied and was admitted to the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign as a Neuroscience/Premed Major. I am so excited about my future and making a difference in the world. It was this realization that made me think back to what my mom once told me. There was a purpose to my tragedy because I was strong enough to find one.
      Ruebenna Greenfield Flack Scholarship
      My mom always told me, “Lucia, I promise you even the darkest tragedies can have purpose” Until recently, I didn’t put much weight in this. I thought it was just something adults said to shine light on tragedy. When I was three, I would have done anything to be like “Daddy”. He was my hero, a stay-at-home dad, and we were inseparable. I wanted to be just like him. But at 5, the dad I had started changing. Daddy was “napping’ more while Mommy was at work. He didn’t want to play with us anymore. One night, I was woken up by more loud screaming. I went into my parent’s room and I saw a man with the most evil eyes screaming at my mother that he would kill her. My once strong and brave mother seemed terrified and weak. The man looked familiar. I murmured, “Daddy?” The man turned to me, his eyes softened and he spoke sweetly to me as if nothing had happened. I hardly noticed Mommy leaving the room, but soon I heard the shuffling footsteps of police officers entering our house. That would be the last night my family was together. I spent the next few years of my life living in fear and uncertainty. I learned things that a child should never have to know: code words that meant to call 911, that safety drills were used for more than just tornadoes, and that I had something called PTSD. Despite all of this, I kept going. I thought I had finally put the past behind me, little did I know I would soon find it necessary to pull upon the strength and resilience I had learned as a child. In 2019, I entered high school taking math, science and English classes 2-4 years above my grade level. The beginning of my junior year, I qualified as a National Merit Hispanic Scholar. Then, in January of my Junior year, my world came crashing down once again. I went from a Type A, high functioning student, to a person in the midst of a manic episode with psychotic features. At that point, I had no idea I was bipolar, nor did I realize I had most likely inherited it from my father, who I then learned was also bipolar. The fight to control my mania and get proper medication was a long battle. It would take two inpatient hospital stays, three partial hospitalizations, three outpatient treatment programs, and five different psychiatrists to finally get my medication under control. I am finally at a place where I feel like I am triumphing over my bipolar. While in my third partial hospitalization program, I finally met the psychiatrist that would unlock the key to treating my bipolar. While other doctors were recommending I be placed in a residential program, Dr. Guitierez remained calm and saw in me what my parents and I could no longer see in myself. Within two months, I went from out-of-control manic to returning to school and getting straight A’s in all AP/ honors classes. Currently, I am in school full time, have a job teaching swim lessons and lifeguarding, and have been stable for the past four months. The experiences of my past have inspired me to become a psychiatrist to help people like myself and my dad. I am so excited about my future and making a difference in the world. It was this realization that made me think back to what my mom once told me. There was a purpose to my tragedy because I was strong enough to find one.
      Lillian's & Ruby's Way Scholarship
      My mom always told me, “Lucia, I promise you even the darkest tragedies can have purpose” Until recently, I didn’t put much weight in this. I thought it was just something adults said to shine light on tragedy. When I was three, I would have done anything to be like “Daddy”. He was my hero, a stay-at-home dad, and we were inseparable. I wanted to be just like him. But at 5, the dad I had started changing. Daddy was “napping’ more while Mommy was at work. He didn’t want to play with us anymore. One night, I was woken up by more loud screaming. I went into my parent’s room and I saw a man with the most evil eyes screaming at my mother that he would kill her. My once strong and brave mother seemed terrified and weak. The man looked familiar. I murmured, “Daddy?” The man turned to me, his eyes softened and he spoke sweetly to me as if nothing had happened. I hardly noticed Mommy leaving the room, but soon I heard the shuffling footsteps of police officers entering our house. That would be the last night my family was together. I spent the next few years of my life living in fear and uncertainty. I learned things that a child should never have to know: code words that meant to call 911, that safety drills were used for more than just tornadoes, and that I had something called PTSD. Despite all of this, I kept going. I thought I had finally put the past behind me, little did I know I would soon find it necessary to pull upon the strength and resilience I had learned as a child. In 2019, I entered high school taking math, science and English classes 2-4 years above my grade level. The beginning of my junior year, I qualified as a National Merit Hispanic Scholar. Then, in January of my Junior year, my world came crashing down once again. I went from a Type A, high functioning student, to a person in the midst of a manic episode with psychotic features. At that point, I had no idea I was bipolar, nor did I realize I had most likely inherited it from my father, who I then learned was also bipolar. The fight to control my mania and get proper medication was a long battle. It would take two inpatient hospital stays, three partial hospitalizations, three outpatient treatment programs, and five different psychiatrists to finally get my medication under control. I am finally at a place where I feel like I am triumphing over my bipolar. While in my third partial hospitalization program, I finally met the psychiatrist that would unlock the key to treating my bipolar. While other doctors were recommending I be placed in a residential program, Dr. Guitierez remained calm and saw in me what my parents and I could no longer see in myself. Within two months, I went from out-of-control manic to returning to school and getting straight A’s in all AP/ honors classes. Currently, I am in school full time, have a job teaching swim lessons and lifeguarding, and have been stable for the past four months. The experiences of my past have inspired me to become a psychiatrist to help people like myself and my dad. I am so excited about my future and making a difference in the world. It was this realization that made me think back to what my mom once told me. There was a purpose to my tragedy because I was strong enough to find one.
      JADED Recovery Scholarship
      My mom always told me, “Lucia, I promise you even the darkest tragedies can have purpose” Until recently, I didn’t put much weight in this. I thought it was just something adults said to shine light on tragedy. When I was three, I would have done anything to be like “Daddy”. He was my hero, a stay-at-home dad, and we were inseparable. I wanted to be just like him. But at 5, the dad I had started changing. Daddy was “napping’ more while Mommy was at work. He didn’t want to play with us anymore. One night, I was woken up by more loud screaming. I went into my parent’s room and I saw a man with the most evil eyes screaming at my mother that he would kill her. My once strong and brave mother seemed terrified and weak. The man looked familiar. I murmured, “Daddy?” The man turned to me, his eyes softened and he spoke sweetly to me as if nothing had happened. I hardly noticed Mommy leaving the room, but soon I heard the shuffling footsteps of police officers entering our house. That would be the last night my family was together. I spent the next few years of my life living in fear and uncertainty. I learned things that a child should never have to know: code words that meant to call 911, that safety drills were used for more than just tornadoes, and that I had something called PTSD. Despite all of this, I kept going. I thought I had finally put the past behind me, little did I know I would soon find it necessary to pull upon the strength and resilience I had learned as a child. In 2019, I entered high school taking math, science and English classes 2-4 years above my grade level. The beginning of my junior year, I qualified as a National Merit Hispanic Scholar. Then, in January of my Junior year, my world came crashing down once again. I went from a Type A, high functioning student, to a person in the midst of a manic episode with psychotic features. At that point, I had no idea I was bipolar, nor did I realize I had most likely inherited it from my father, who I then learned was also bipolar. The fight to control my mania and get proper medication was a long battle. It would take two inpatient hospital stays, three partial hospitalizations, three outpatient treatment programs, and five different psychiatrists to finally get my medication under control. I am finally at a place where I feel like I am triumphing over my bipolar. While in my third partial hospitalization program, I finally met the psychiatrist that would unlock the key to treating my bipolar. While other doctors were recommending I be placed in a residential program, Dr. Guitierez remained calm and saw in me what my parents and I could no longer see in myself. Within two months, I went from out-of-control manic to returning to school and getting straight A’s in all AP/ honors classes. Currently, I am in school full time, have a job teaching swim lessons and lifeguarding, and have been stable for the past four months. The experiences of my past have inspired me to become a psychiatrist to help people like myself and my dad. I am so excited about my future and making a difference in the world. It was this realization that made me think back to what my mom once told me. There was a purpose to my tragedy because I was strong enough to find one.
      Francis E. Moore Prime Time Ministries Scholarship
      My mom always told me, “Lucia, I promise you even the darkest tragedies can have purpose” Until recently, I didn’t put much weight in this. I thought it was just something adults said to shine light on tragedy. When I was three, I would have done anything to be like “Daddy”. He was my hero, a stay-at-home dad, and we were inseparable. I wanted to be just like him. But at 5, the dad I had started changing. Daddy was “napping’ more while Mommy was at work. He didn’t want to play with us anymore. One night, I was woken up by more loud screaming. I went into my parent’s room and I saw a man with the most evil eyes screaming at my mother that he would kill her. My once strong and brave mother seemed terrified and weak. The man looked familiar. I murmured, “Daddy?” The man turned to me, his eyes softened and he spoke sweetly to me as if nothing had happened. I hardly noticed Mommy leaving the room, but soon I heard the shuffling footsteps of police officers entering our house. That would be the last night my family was together. I spent the next few years of my life living in fear and uncertainty. I learned things that a child should never have to know: code words that meant to call 911, that safety drills were used for more than just tornadoes, and that I had something called PTSD. Despite all of this, I kept going. I thought I had finally put the past behind me, little did I know I would soon find it necessary to pull upon the strength and resilience I had learned as a child. In 2019, I entered high school taking math, science and English classes 2-4 years above my grade level. The beginning of my junior year, I qualified as a National Merit Hispanic Scholar. Then, in January of my Junior year, my world came crashing down once again. I went from a Type A, high functioning student, to a person in the midst of a manic episode with psychotic features. At that point, I had no idea I was bipolar, nor did I realize I had most likely inherited it from my father, who I then learned was also bipolar. The fight to control my mania and get proper medication was a long battle. It would take two inpatient hospital stays, three partial hospitalizations, three outpatient treatment programs, and five different psychiatrists to finally get my medication under control. I am finally at a place where I feel like I am triumphing over my bipolar. While in my third partial hospitalization program, I finally met the psychiatrist that would unlock the key to treating my bipolar. While other doctors were recommending I be placed in a residential program, Dr. Guitierez remained calm and saw in me what my parents and I could no longer see in myself. Within two months, I went from out-of-control manic to returning to school and getting straight A’s in all AP/ honors classes. Currently, I am in school full time, have a job teaching swim lessons and lifeguarding, and have been stable for the past four months. The experiences of my past have inspired me to become a psychiatrist to help people like myself and my dad. I am so excited about my future and making a difference in the world. It was this realization that made me think back to what my mom once told me. There was a purpose to my tragedy because I was strong enough to find one.
      Elevate Mental Health Awareness Scholarship
      My mom always told me, “Lucia, I promise you even the darkest tragedies can have purpose” Until recently, I didn’t put much weight in this. I thought it was just something adults said to shine light on tragedy. When I was three, I would have done anything to be like “Daddy”. He was my hero, a stay-at-home dad, and we were inseparable. I wanted to be just like him. But at 5, the dad I had started changing. Daddy was “napping’ more while Mommy was at work. He didn’t want to play with us anymore. One night, I was woken up by more loud screaming. I went into my parent’s room and I saw a man with the most evil eyes screaming at my mother that he would kill her. My once strong and brave mother seemed terrified and weak. The man looked familiar. I murmured, “Daddy?” The man turned to me, his eyes softened and he spoke sweetly to me as if nothing had happened. I hardly noticed Mommy leaving the room, but soon I heard the shuffling footsteps of police officers entering our house. That would be the last night my family was together. I spent the next few years of my life living in fear and uncertainty. I learned things that a child should never have to know: code words that meant to call 911, that safety drills were used for more than just tornadoes, and that I had something called PTSD. Despite all of this, I kept going. I thought I had finally put the past behind me, little did I know I would soon find it necessary to pull upon the strength and resilience I had learned as a child. In 2019, I entered high school taking math, science and English classes 2-4 years above my grade level. The beginning of my junior year, I qualified as a National Merit Hispanic Scholar. Then, in January of my Junior year, my world came crashing down once again. I went from a Type A, high functioning student, to a person in the midst of a manic episode with psychotic features. At that point, I had no idea I was bipolar, nor did I realize I had most likely inherited it from my father, who I then learned was also bipolar. The fight to control my mania and get proper medication was a long battle. It would take two inpatient hospital stays, three partial hospitalizations, three outpatient treatment programs, and five different psychiatrists to finally get my medication under control. I am finally at a place where I feel like I am triumphing over my bipolar. While in my third partial hospitalization program, I finally met the psychiatrist that would unlock the key to treating my bipolar. While other doctors were recommending I be placed in a residential program, Dr. Guitierez remained calm and saw in me what my parents and I could no longer see in myself. Within two months, I went from out-of-control manic to returning to school and getting straight A’s in all AP/ honors classes. Currently, I am in school full time, have a job teaching swim lessons and lifeguarding, and have been stable for the past four months. The experiences of my past have inspired me to become a psychiatrist to help people like myself and my dad. I am so excited about my future and making a difference in the world. It was this realization that made me think back to what my mom once told me. There was a purpose to my tragedy because I was strong enough to find one.
      Above the Peak - Ama Dablam Kesel Family Scholarship
      My mom always told me, “Lucia, I promise you even the darkest tragedies can have purpose” Until recently, I didn’t put much weight in this. I thought it was just something adults said to shine light on tragedy. When I was three, I would have done anything to be like “Daddy”. He was my hero, a stay-at-home dad, and we were inseparable. I wanted to be just like him. But at 5, the dad I had started changing. Daddy was “napping’ more while Mommy was at work. He didn’t want to play with us anymore. One night, I was woken up by more loud screaming. I went into my parent’s room and I saw a man with the most evil eyes screaming at my mother that he would kill her. My once strong and brave mother seemed terrified and weak. The man looked familiar. I murmured, “Daddy?” The man turned to me, his eyes softened and he spoke sweetly to me as if nothing had happened. I hardly noticed Mommy leaving the room, but soon I heard the shuffling footsteps of police officers entering our house. That would be the last night my family was together. I spent the next few years of my life living in fear and uncertainty. I learned things that a child should never have to know: code words that meant to call 911, that safety drills were used for more than just tornadoes, and that I had something called PTSD. Despite all of this, I kept going. I thought I had finally put the past behind me, little did I know I would soon find it necessary to pull upon the strength and resilience I had learned as a child. In 2019, I entered high school taking math, science and English classes 2-4 years above my grade level. The beginning of my junior year, I qualified as a National Merit Hispanic Scholar. Then, in January of my Junior year, my world came crashing down once again. I went from a Type A, high functioning student, to a person in the midst of a manic episode with psychotic features. At that point, I had no idea I was bipolar, nor did I realize I had most likely inherited it from my father, who I then learned was also bipolar. The fight to control my mania and get proper medication was a long battle. It would take two inpatient hospital stays, three partial hospitalizations, three outpatient treatment programs, and five different psychiatrists to finally get my medication under control. I am finally at a place where I feel like I am triumphing over my bipolar. While in my third partial hospitalization program, I finally met the psychiatrist that would unlock the key to treating my bipolar. While other doctors were recommending I be placed in a residential program, Dr. Guitierez remained calm and saw in me what my parents and I could no longer see in myself. Within two months, I went from out-of-control manic to returning to school and getting straight A’s in all AP/ honors classes. Currently, I am in school full time, have a job teaching swim lessons and lifeguarding, and have been stable for the past four months. The experiences of my past have inspired me to become a psychiatrist to help people like myself and my dad. I am so excited about my future and making a difference in the world. It was this realization that made me think back to what my mom once told me. There was a purpose to my tragedy because I was strong enough to find one.
      Another Way Scholarship
      My mom always told me, “Lucia, I promise you even the darkest tragedies can have purpose” Until recently, I didn’t put much weight in this. I thought it was just something adults said to shine light on tragedy. When I was three, I would have done anything to be like “Daddy”. He was my hero, a stay-at-home dad, and we were inseparable. I wanted to be just like him. But at 5, the dad I had started changing. Daddy was “napping’ more while Mommy was at work. He didn’t want to play with us anymore. One night, I was woken up by more loud screaming. I went into my parent’s room and I saw a man with the most evil eyes screaming at my mother that he would kill her. My once strong and brave mother seemed terrified and weak. The man looked familiar. I murmured, “Daddy?” The man turned to me, his eyes softened and he spoke sweetly to me as if nothing had happened. I hardly noticed Mommy leaving the room, but soon I heard the shuffling footsteps of police officers entering our house. That would be the last night my family was together. I spent the next few years of my life living in fear and uncertainty. I learned things that a child should never have to know: code words that meant to call 911, that safety drills were used for more than just tornadoes, and that I had something called PTSD. Despite all of this, I kept going. I thought I had finally put the past behind me, little did I know I would soon find it necessary to pull upon the strength and resilience I had learned as a child. In 2019, I entered high school taking math, science and English classes 2-4 years above my grade level. The beginning of my junior year, I qualified as a National Merit Hispanic Scholar. Then, in January of my Junior year, my world came crashing down once again. I went from a Type A, high functioning student, to a person in the midst of a manic episode with psychotic features. At that point, I had no idea I was bipolar, nor did I realize I had most likely inherited it from my father, who I then learned was also bipolar. The fight to control my mania and get proper medication was a long battle. It would take two inpatient hospital stays, three partial hospitalizations, three outpatient treatment programs, and five different psychiatrists to finally get my medication under control. I am finally at a place where I feel like I am triumphing over my bipolar. While in my third partial hospitalization program, I finally met the psychiatrist that would unlock the key to treating my bipolar. While other doctors were recommending I be placed in a residential program, Dr. Guitierez remained calm and saw in me what my parents and I could no longer see in myself. Within two months, I went from out-of-control manic to returning to school and getting straight A’s in all AP/ honors classes. Currently, I am in school full time, have a job teaching swim lessons and lifeguarding, and have been stable for the past four months. The experiences of my past have inspired me to become a psychiatrist to help people like myself and my dad. I am so excited about my future and making a difference in the world. It was this realization that made me think back to what my mom once told me. There was a purpose to my tragedy because I was strong enough to find one.
      Elijah's Helping Hand Scholarship Award
      My mom always told me, “Lucia, I promise you even the darkest tragedies can have purpose” Until recently, I didn’t put much weight in this. I thought it was just something adults said to shine light on tragedy. When I was three, I would have done anything to be like “Daddy”. He was my hero, a stay-at-home dad, and we were inseparable. I wanted to be just like him. But at 5, the dad I had started changing. Daddy was “napping’ more while Mommy was at work. He didn’t want to play with us anymore. One night, I was woken up by more loud screaming. I went into my parent’s room and I saw a man with the most evil eyes screaming at my mother that he would kill her. My once strong and brave mother seemed terrified and weak. The man looked familiar. I murmured, “Daddy?” The man turned to me, his eyes softened and he spoke sweetly to me as if nothing had happened. I hardly noticed Mommy leaving the room, but soon I heard the shuffling footsteps of police officers entering our house. That would be the last night my family was together. I spent the next few years of my life living in fear and uncertainty. I learned things that a child should never have to know: code words that meant to call 911, that safety drills were used for more than just tornadoes, and that I had something called PTSD. Despite all of this, I kept going. I thought I had finally put the past behind me, little did I know I would soon find it necessary to pull upon the strength and resilience I had learned as a child. In 2019, I entered high school taking math, science and English classes 2-4 years above my grade level. The beginning of my junior year, I qualified as a National Merit Hispanic Scholar. Then, in January of my Junior year, my world came crashing down once again. I went from a Type A, high functioning student, to a person in the midst of a manic episode with psychotic features. At that point, I had no idea I was bipolar, nor did I realize I had most likely inherited it from my father, who I then learned was also bipolar. The fight to control my mania and get proper medication was a long battle. It would take two inpatient hospital stays, three partial hospitalizations, three outpatient treatment programs, and five different psychiatrists to finally get my medication under control. I am finally at a place where I feel like I am triumphing over my bipolar. While in my third partial hospitalization program, I finally met the psychiatrist that would unlock the key to treating my bipolar. While other doctors were recommending I be placed in a residential program, Dr. Guitierez remained calm and saw in me what my parents and I could no longer see in myself. Within two months, I went from out-of-control manic to returning to school and getting straight A’s in all AP/ honors classes. Currently, I am in school full time, have a job teaching swim lessons and lifeguarding, and have been stable for the past four months. The experiences of my past have inspired me to become a psychiatrist to help people like myself and my dad. I am so excited about my future and making a difference in the world. It was this realization that made me think back to what my mom once told me. There was a purpose to my tragedy because I was strong enough to find one.
      Mind, Body, & Soul Scholarship
      My mom always told me, “Lucia, I promise you even the darkest tragedies can have purpose” Until recently, I didn’t put much weight in this. I thought it was just something adults said to shine light on tragedy. When I was three, I would have done anything to be like “Daddy”. He was my hero, a stay-at-home dad, and we were inseparable. I wanted to be just like him. But at 5, the dad I had started changing. Daddy was “napping’ more while Mommy was at work. He didn’t want to play with us anymore. One night, I was woken up by more loud screaming. I went into my parent’s room and I saw a man with the most evil eyes screaming at my mother that he would kill her. My once strong and brave mother seemed terrified and weak. The man looked familiar. I murmured, “Daddy?” The man turned to me, his eyes softened and he spoke sweetly to me as if nothing had happened. I hardly noticed Mommy leaving the room, but soon I heard the shuffling footsteps of police officers entering our house. That would be the last night my family was together. I spent the next few years of my life living in fear and uncertainty. I learned things that a child should never have to know: code words that meant to call 911, that safety drills were used for more than just tornadoes, and that I had something called PTSD. Despite all of this, I kept going. I thought I had finally put the past behind me, little did I know I would soon find it necessary to pull upon the strength and resilience I had learned as a child. In 2019, I entered high school taking math, science and English classes 2-4 years above my grade level. The beginning of my junior year, I qualified as a National Merit Hispanic Scholar. Then, in January of my Junior year, my world came crashing down once again. I went from a Type A, high functioning student, to a person in the midst of a manic episode with psychotic features. At that point, I had no idea I was bipolar, nor did I realize I had most likely inherited it from my father, who I then learned was also bipolar. The fight to control my mania and get proper medication was a long battle. It would take two inpatient hospital stays, three partial hospitalizations, three outpatient treatment programs, and five different psychiatrists to finally get my medication under control. I am finally at a place where I feel like I am triumphing over my bipolar. While in my third partial hospitalization program, I finally met the psychiatrist that would unlock the key to treating my bipolar. While other doctors were recommending I be placed in a residential program, Dr. Guitierez remained calm and saw in me what my parents and I could no longer see in myself. Within two months, I went from out-of-control manic to returning to school and getting straight A’s in all AP/ honors classes. Currently, I am in school full time, have a job teaching swim lessons and lifeguarding, and have been stable for the past four months. The experiences of my past have inspired me to become a psychiatrist to help people like myself and my dad. I am so excited about my future and making a difference in the world. It was this realization that made me think back to what my mom once told me. There was a purpose to my tragedy because I was strong enough to find one.
      Henry Respert Alzheimer's and Dementia Awareness Scholarship
      My mom always told me, “Lucia, I promise you even the darkest tragedies can have purpose” Until recently, I didn’t put much weight in this. I thought it was just something adults said to shine light on tragedy. When I was three, I would have done anything to be like “Daddy”. He was my hero, a stay at home dad, and we were inseparable. I wanted to be just like him, including the time I chopped off all my hair so I could have a short haircut just like him. My mom likes to share how I proudly walked through the door after my haircut and announced, “Now, I look beautiful just like Daddy!” But at 5, the dad I had started changing. Daddy was “napping’ more while Mommy was at work. He didn’t want to play with us anymore and told me he needed my help. At the time, my sister was only two and my brother was just an infant so I learned how to change diapers, make bottles, and read bedtime stories to my siblings. Meanwhile, his two hour “naps” turned into full days of laying on the coach. One night, I was woken up by more loud screaming. I went into my parent’s room and I saw a man with the most evil eyes screaming at my mother that he would kill her. My once strong and brave mother seemed terrified and weak. The man looked familiar. I murmured, “Daddy?” The man turned to me, his eyes softened and he spoke sweetly to me as if nothing had happened. I hardly noticed Mommy leaving the room, but soon I heard the shuffling footsteps of police officers entering our house. That would be the last night my family was together. I spent the next few years of my life living in fear and uncertainty. I learned things that a child should never have to know: code words that meant to call 911, that safety drills were used for more than just tornadoes, and that I had something called PTSD. Despite all of this, I kept going. With orders of protection in place and safety plans created, I returned to Kindergarten that Monday. When I would have bursts of anger, my mom would say “I love you and I’m sorry for what has happened, but I will not let what happened define you.” She would remind me of how I am the reason my siblings are safe, how I was a hero just like the one I once saw in my dad. I thought I had finally put the past behind me, little did I know I would soon find it necessary to pull upon the strength and resilience I had learned as a child. In 2019, I entered high school taking math, science and English classes 2-4 years above my grade level. The beginning of my junior year, I took the PSAT-NMSQT and qualified as a National Merit Hispanic Scholar. Then, in January of my Junior year, my world came crashing down once again. I went from a Type A, high functioning student, to a person in the midst of a manic episode with psychotic features. At that point, I had no idea I was bipolar, nor did I realize I had most likely inherited it from my father, who I then learned was also bipolar. The fight to control my mania and get proper medication was a long battle. It would take two inpatient hospital stays, three partial hospitalizations, three outpatient treatment programs, and five different psychiatrists to finally get my medication under control. I am finally at a place where I feel like I am finally triumphing over my bipolar. While in my third partial hospitalization program, I finally met the psychiatrist that would unlock the key to treating my bipolar. While other doctors were recommending I be placed in a residential program, Dr. Guitierez remained calm and saw in me what my parents and I could no longer see in myself. Within two months, I went from out of control manic to returning to school and getting straight A’s in all AP and honors classes. Currently I am in school full time, have a job teaching swim lessons and lifeguarding, and have been stable for the past four months. The experiences of my past have inspired me to become a psychiatrist to help people like myself and my dad. I applied and was admitted to the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign as a Neuroscience/Premed Major. I am so excited about my future and making a difference in the world. It was this realization that made me think back to what my mom once told me. There was a purpose to my tragedy because I was strong enough to find one.
      Analtha Parr Pell Memorial Scholarship
      My mom always told me, “Lucia, I promise you even the darkest tragedies can have purpose” Until recently, I didn’t put much weight in this. I thought it was just something adults said to shine light on tragedy. When I was three, I would have done anything to be like “Daddy”. He was my hero, a stay-at-home dad, and we were inseparable. I wanted to be just like him. But at 5, the dad I had started changing. Daddy was “napping’ more while Mommy was at work. He didn’t want to play with us anymore. One night, I was woken up by more loud screaming. I went into my parent’s room and I saw a man with the most evil eyes screaming at my mother that he would kill her. My once strong and brave mother seemed terrified and weak. The man looked familiar. I murmured, “Daddy?” The man turned to me, his eyes softened and he spoke sweetly to me as if nothing had happened. I hardly noticed Mommy leaving the room, but soon I heard the shuffling footsteps of police officers entering our house. That would be the last night my family was together. I spent the next few years of my life living in fear and uncertainty. I learned things that a child should never have to know: code words that meant to call 911, that safety drills were used for more than just tornadoes, and that I had something called PTSD. Despite all of this, I kept going. I thought I had finally put the past behind me, little did I know I would soon find it necessary to pull upon the strength and resilience I had learned as a child. In 2019, I entered high school taking math, science and English classes 2-4 years above my grade level. The beginning of my junior year, I qualified as a National Merit Hispanic Scholar. Then, in January of my Junior year, my world came crashing down once again. I went from a Type A, high functioning student, to a person in the midst of a manic episode with psychotic features. At that point, I had no idea I was bipolar, nor did I realize I had most likely inherited it from my father, who I then learned was also bipolar. The fight to control my mania and get proper medication was a long battle. It would take two inpatient hospital stays, three partial hospitalizations, three outpatient treatment programs, and five different psychiatrists to finally get my medication under control. I am finally at a place where I feel like I am triumphing over my bipolar. While in my third partial hospitalization program, I finally met the psychiatrist that would unlock the key to treating my bipolar. While other doctors were recommending I be placed in a residential program, Dr. Guitierez remained calm and saw in me what my parents and I could no longer see in myself. Within two months, I went from out-of-control manic to returning to school and getting straight A’s in all AP/ honors classes. Currently, I am in school full time, have a job teaching swim lessons and lifeguarding, and have been stable for the past four months. The experiences of my past have inspired me to become a psychiatrist to help people like myself and my dad. I am so excited about my future and making a difference in the world. It was this realization that made me think back to what my mom once told me. There was a purpose to my tragedy because I was strong enough to find one.
      Maxwell Tuan Nguyen Memorial Scholarship
      My mom always told me, “Lucia, I promise you even the darkest tragedies can have purpose” Until recently, I didn’t put much weight in this. I thought it was just something adults said to shine light on tragedy. When I was three, I would have done anything to be like “Daddy”. He was my hero, a stay-at-home dad, and we were inseparable. I wanted to be just like him. But at 5, the dad I had started changing. Daddy was “napping’ more while Mommy was at work. He didn’t want to play with us anymore. One night, I was woken up by more loud screaming. I went into my parent’s room and I saw a man with the most evil eyes screaming at my mother that he would kill her. My once strong and brave mother seemed terrified and weak. The man looked familiar. I murmured, “Daddy?” The man turned to me, his eyes softened and he spoke sweetly to me as if nothing had happened. I hardly noticed Mommy leaving the room, but soon I heard the shuffling footsteps of police officers entering our house. That would be the last night my family was together. I spent the next few years of my life living in fear and uncertainty. I learned things that a child should never have to know: code words that meant to call 911, that safety drills were used for more than just tornadoes, and that I had something called PTSD. Despite all of this, I kept going. I thought I had finally put the past behind me, little did I know I would soon find it necessary to pull upon the strength and resilience I had learned as a child. In 2019, I entered high school taking math, science and English classes 2-4 years above my grade level. The beginning of my junior year, I qualified as a National Merit Hispanic Scholar. Then, in January of my Junior year, my world came crashing down once again. I went from a Type A, high functioning student, to a person in the midst of a manic episode with psychotic features. At that point, I had no idea I was bipolar, nor did I realize I had most likely inherited it from my father, who I then learned was also bipolar. The fight to control my mania and get proper medication was a long battle. It would take two inpatient hospital stays, three partial hospitalizations, three outpatient treatment programs, and five different psychiatrists to finally get my medication under control. I am finally at a place where I feel like I am triumphing over my bipolar. While in my third partial hospitalization program, I finally met the psychiatrist that would unlock the key to treating my bipolar. While other doctors were recommending I be placed in a residential program, Dr. Guitierez remained calm and saw in me what my parents and I could no longer see in myself. Within two months, I went from out-of-control manic to returning to school and getting straight A’s in all AP/ honors classes. Currently, I am in school full time, have a job teaching swim lessons and lifeguarding, and have been stable for the past four months. The experiences of my past have inspired me to become a psychiatrist to help people like myself and my dad. I am so excited about my future and making a difference in the world. It was this realization that made me think back to what my mom once told me. There was a purpose to my tragedy because I was strong enough to find one.
      William Griggs Memorial Scholarship for Science and Math
      My mom always told me, “Lucia, I promise you even the darkest tragedies can have purpose” Until recently, I didn’t put much weight in this. I thought it was just something adults said to shine light on tragedy. When I was three, I would have done anything to be like “Daddy”. He was my hero, a stay-at-home dad, and we were inseparable. I wanted to be just like him. But at 5, the dad I had started changing. Daddy was “napping’ more while Mommy was at work. He didn’t want to play with us anymore. One night, I was woken up by more loud screaming. I went into my parent’s room and I saw a man with the most evil eyes screaming at my mother that he would kill her. My once strong and brave mother seemed terrified and weak. The man looked familiar. I murmured, “Daddy?” The man turned to me, his eyes softened and he spoke sweetly to me as if nothing had happened. I hardly noticed Mommy leaving the room, but soon I heard the shuffling footsteps of police officers entering our house. That would be the last night my family was together. I spent the next few years of my life living in fear and uncertainty. I learned things that a child should never have to know: code words that meant to call 911, that safety drills were used for more than just tornadoes, and that I had something called PTSD. Despite all of this, I kept going. I thought I had finally put the past behind me, little did I know I would soon find it necessary to pull upon the strength and resilience I had learned as a child. In 2019, I entered high school taking math, science and English classes 2-4 years above my grade level. The beginning of my junior year, I qualified as a National Merit Hispanic Scholar. Then, in January of my Junior year, my world came crashing down once again. I went from a Type A, high functioning student, to a person in the midst of a manic episode with psychotic features. At that point, I had no idea I was bipolar, nor did I realize I had most likely inherited it from my father, who I then learned was also bipolar. The fight to control my mania and get proper medication was a long battle. It would take two inpatient hospital stays, three partial hospitalizations, three outpatient treatment programs, and five different psychiatrists to finally get my medication under control. I am finally at a place where I feel like I am triumphing over my bipolar. While in my third partial hospitalization program, I finally met the psychiatrist that would unlock the key to treating my bipolar. While other doctors were recommending I be placed in a residential program, Dr. Guitierez remained calm and saw in me what my parents and I could no longer see in myself. Within two months, I went from out-of-control manic to returning to school and getting straight A’s in all AP/ honors classes. Currently, I am in school full time, have a job teaching swim lessons and lifeguarding, and have been stable for the past four months. The experiences of my past have inspired me to become a psychiatrist to help people like myself and my dad. I am so excited about my future and making a difference in the world. It was this realization that made me think back to what my mom once told me. There was a purpose to my tragedy because I was strong enough to find one.
      Deacon William E. Johnson Sr. Memorial Scholarship
      My mom always told me, “Lucia, I promise you even the darkest tragedies can have purpose” Until recently, I didn’t put much weight in this. I thought it was just something adults said to shine light on tragedy. When I was three, I would have done anything to be like “Daddy”. He was my hero, a stay-at-home dad, and we were inseparable. I wanted to be just like him. But at 5, the dad I had started changing. Daddy was “napping’ more while Mommy was at work. He didn’t want to play with us anymore. One night, I was woken up by more loud screaming. I went into my parent’s room and I saw a man with the most evil eyes screaming at my mother that he would kill her. My once strong and brave mother seemed terrified and weak. The man looked familiar. I murmured, “Daddy?” The man turned to me, his eyes softened and he spoke sweetly to me as if nothing had happened. I hardly noticed Mommy leaving the room, but soon I heard the shuffling footsteps of police officers entering our house. That would be the last night my family was together. I spent the next few years of my life living in fear and uncertainty. I learned things that a child should never have to know: code words that meant to call 911, that safety drills were used for more than just tornadoes, and that I had something called PTSD. Despite all of this, I kept going. I thought I had finally put the past behind me, little did I know I would soon find it necessary to pull upon the strength and resilience I had learned as a child. In 2019, I entered high school taking math, science and English classes 2-4 years above my grade level. The beginning of my junior year, I qualified as a National Merit Hispanic Scholar. Then, in January of my Junior year, my world came crashing down once again. I went from a Type A, high functioning student, to a person in the midst of a manic episode with psychotic features. At that point, I had no idea I was bipolar, nor did I realize I had most likely inherited it from my father, who I then learned was also bipolar. The fight to control my mania and get proper medication was a long battle. It would take two inpatient hospital stays, three partial hospitalizations, three outpatient treatment programs, and five different psychiatrists to finally get my medication under control. I am finally at a place where I feel like I am triumphing over my bipolar. While in my third partial hospitalization program, I finally met the psychiatrist that would unlock the key to treating my bipolar. While other doctors were recommending I be placed in a residential program, Dr. Guitierez remained calm and saw in me what my parents and I could no longer see in myself. Within two months, I went from out-of-control manic to returning to school and getting straight A’s in all AP/ honors classes. Currently, I am in school full time, have a job teaching swim lessons and lifeguarding, and have been stable for the past four months. The experiences of my past have inspired me to become a psychiatrist to help people like myself and my dad. I am so excited about my future and making a difference in the world. It was this realization that made me think back to what my mom once told me. There was a purpose to my tragedy because I was strong enough to find one.
      Sunshine Legall Scholarship
      My mom always told me, “Lucia, I promise you even the darkest tragedies can have purpose” Until recently, I didn’t put much weight in this. I thought it was just something adults said to shine light on tragedy. When I was three, I would have done anything to be like “Daddy”. He was my hero, a stay-at-home dad, and we were inseparable. I wanted to be just like him. But at 5, the dad I had started changing. Daddy was “napping’ more while Mommy was at work. He didn’t want to play with us anymore. One night, I was woken up by more loud screaming. I went into my parent’s room and I saw a man with the most evil eyes screaming at my mother that he would kill her. My once strong and brave mother seemed terrified and weak. The man looked familiar. I murmured, “Daddy?” The man turned to me, his eyes softened and he spoke sweetly to me as if nothing had happened. I hardly noticed Mommy leaving the room, but soon I heard the shuffling footsteps of police officers entering our house. That would be the last night my family was together. I spent the next few years of my life living in fear and uncertainty. I learned things that a child should never have to know: code words that meant to call 911, that safety drills were used for more than just tornadoes, and that I had something called PTSD. Despite all of this, I kept going. I thought I had finally put the past behind me, little did I know I would soon find it necessary to pull upon the strength and resilience I had learned as a child. In 2019, I entered high school taking math, science and English classes 2-4 years above my grade level. The beginning of my junior year, I qualified as a National Merit Hispanic Scholar. Then, in January of my Junior year, my world came crashing down once again. I went from a Type A, high functioning student, to a person in the midst of a manic episode with psychotic features. At that point, I had no idea I was bipolar, nor did I realize I had most likely inherited it from my father, who I then learned was also bipolar. The fight to control my mania and get proper medication was a long battle. It would take two inpatient hospital stays, three partial hospitalizations, three outpatient treatment programs, and five different psychiatrists to finally get my medication under control. I am finally at a place where I feel like I am triumphing over my bipolar. While in my third partial hospitalization program, I finally met the psychiatrist that would unlock the key to treating my bipolar. While other doctors were recommending I be placed in a residential program, Dr. Guitierez remained calm and saw in me what my parents and I could no longer see in myself. Within two months, I went from out-of-control manic to returning to school and getting straight A’s in all AP/ honors classes. Currently, I am in school full time, have a job teaching swim lessons and lifeguarding, and have been stable for the past four months. The experiences of my past have inspired me to become a psychiatrist to help people like myself and my dad. I am so excited about my future and making a difference in the world. It was this realization that made me think back to what my mom once told me. There was a purpose to my tragedy because I was strong enough to find one.
      Eleven Scholarship
      My mom always told me, “Lucia, I promise you even the darkest tragedies can have purpose” Until recently, I didn’t put much weight in this. I thought it was just something adults said to shine light on tragedy. When I was three, I would have done anything to be like “Daddy”. He was my hero, a stay-at-home dad, and we were inseparable. I wanted to be just like him. But at 5, the dad I had started changing. Daddy was “napping’ more while Mommy was at work. He didn’t want to play with us anymore. One night, I was woken up by more loud screaming. I went into my parent’s room and I saw a man with the most evil eyes screaming at my mother that he would kill her. My once strong and brave mother seemed terrified and weak. The man looked familiar. I murmured, “Daddy?” The man turned to me, his eyes softened and he spoke sweetly to me as if nothing had happened. I hardly noticed Mommy leaving the room, but soon I heard the shuffling footsteps of police officers entering our house. That would be the last night my family was together. I spent the next few years of my life living in fear and uncertainty. I learned things that a child should never have to know: code words that meant to call 911, that safety drills were used for more than just tornadoes, and that I had something called PTSD. Despite all of this, I kept going. I thought I had finally put the past behind me, little did I know I would soon find it necessary to pull upon the strength and resilience I had learned as a child. In 2019, I entered high school taking math, science and English classes 2-4 years above my grade level. The beginning of my junior year, I qualified as a National Merit Hispanic Scholar. Then, in January of my Junior year, my world came crashing down once again. I went from a Type A, high functioning student, to a person in the midst of a manic episode with psychotic features. At that point, I had no idea I was bipolar, nor did I realize I had most likely inherited it from my father, who I then learned was also bipolar. The fight to control my mania and get proper medication was a long battle. It would take two inpatient hospital stays, three partial hospitalizations, three outpatient treatment programs, and five different psychiatrists to finally get my medication under control. I am finally at a place where I feel like I am triumphing over my bipolar. While in my third partial hospitalization program, I finally met the psychiatrist that would unlock the key to treating my bipolar. While other doctors were recommending I be placed in a residential program, Dr. Guitierez remained calm and saw in me what my parents and I could no longer see in myself. Within two months, I went from out-of-control manic to returning to school and getting straight A’s in all AP/ honors classes. Currently, I am in school full time, have a job teaching swim lessons and lifeguarding, and have been stable for the past four months. The experiences of my past have inspired me to become a psychiatrist to help people like myself and my dad. I am so excited about my future and making a difference in the world. It was this realization that made me think back to what my mom once told me. There was a purpose to my tragedy because I was strong enough to find one.
      Jerome D. Carr Memorial Scholarship for Overcoming Adversity
      My mom always told me, “Lucia, I promise you even the darkest tragedies can have purpose” Until recently, I didn’t put much weight in this. I thought it was just something adults said to shine light on tragedy. When I was three, I would have done anything to be like “Daddy”. He was my hero, a stay-at-home dad, and we were inseparable. I wanted to be just like him. But at 5, the dad I had started changing. Daddy was “napping’ more while Mommy was at work. He didn’t want to play with us anymore. One night, I was woken up by more loud screaming. I went into my parent’s room and I saw a man with the most evil eyes screaming at my mother that he would kill her. My once strong and brave mother seemed terrified and weak. The man looked familiar. I murmured, “Daddy?” The man turned to me, his eyes softened and he spoke sweetly to me as if nothing had happened. I hardly noticed Mommy leaving the room, but soon I heard the shuffling footsteps of police officers entering our house. That would be the last night my family was together. I spent the next few years of my life living in fear and uncertainty. I learned things that a child should never have to know: code words that meant to call 911, that safety drills were used for more than just tornadoes, and that I had something called PTSD. Despite all of this, I kept going. I thought I had finally put the past behind me, little did I know I would soon find it necessary to pull upon the strength and resilience I had learned as a child. In 2019, I entered high school taking math, science and English classes 2-4 years above my grade level. The beginning of my junior year, I qualified as a National Merit Hispanic Scholar. Then, in January of my Junior year, my world came crashing down once again. I went from a Type A, high functioning student, to a person in the midst of a manic episode with psychotic features. At that point, I had no idea I was bipolar, nor did I realize I had most likely inherited it from my father, who I then learned was also bipolar. The fight to control my mania and get proper medication was a long battle. It would take two inpatient hospital stays, three partial hospitalizations, three outpatient treatment programs, and five different psychiatrists to finally get my medication under control. I am finally at a place where I feel like I am triumphing over my bipolar. While in my third partial hospitalization program, I finally met the psychiatrist that would unlock the key to treating my bipolar. While other doctors were recommending I be placed in a residential program, Dr. Guitierez remained calm and saw in me what my parents and I could no longer see in myself. Within two months, I went from out-of-control manic to returning to school and getting straight A’s in all AP/ honors classes. Currently, I am in school full time, have a job teaching swim lessons and lifeguarding, and have been stable for the past four months. The experiences of my past have inspired me to become a psychiatrist to help people like myself and my dad. I am so excited about my future and making a difference in the world. It was this realization that made me think back to what my mom once told me. There was a purpose to my tragedy because I was strong enough to find one.
      NE1 NE-Dream Scholarship
      My mom always told me, “Lucia, I promise you even the darkest tragedies can have purpose” Until recently, I didn’t put much weight in this. I thought it was just something adults said to shine light on tragedy. When I was three, I would have done anything to be like “Daddy”. He was my hero, a stay-at-home dad, and we were inseparable. I wanted to be just like him. But at 5, the dad I had started changing. Daddy was “napping’ more while Mommy was at work. He didn’t want to play with us anymore. One night, I was woken up by more loud screaming. I went into my parent’s room and I saw a man with the most evil eyes screaming at my mother that he would kill her. My once strong and brave mother seemed terrified and weak. The man looked familiar. I murmured, “Daddy?” The man turned to me, his eyes softened and he spoke sweetly to me as if nothing had happened. I hardly noticed Mommy leaving the room, but soon I heard the shuffling footsteps of police officers entering our house. That would be the last night my family was together. I spent the next few years of my life living in fear and uncertainty. I learned things that a child should never have to know: code words that meant to call 911, that safety drills were used for more than just tornadoes, and that I had something called PTSD. Despite all of this, I kept going. I thought I had finally put the past behind me, little did I know I would soon find it necessary to pull upon the strength and resilience I had learned as a child. In 2019, I entered high school taking math, science and English classes 2-4 years above my grade level. The beginning of my junior year, I qualified as a National Merit Hispanic Scholar. Then, in January of my Junior year, my world came crashing down once again. I went from a Type A, high functioning student, to a person in the midst of a manic episode with psychotic features. At that point, I had no idea I was bipolar, nor did I realize I had most likely inherited it from my father, who I then learned was also bipolar. The fight to control my mania and get proper medication was a long battle. It would take two inpatient hospital stays, three partial hospitalizations, three outpatient treatment programs, and five different psychiatrists to finally get my medication under control. I am finally at a place where I feel like I am triumphing over my bipolar. While in my third partial hospitalization program, I finally met the psychiatrist that would unlock the key to treating my bipolar. While other doctors were recommending I be placed in a residential program, Dr. Guitierez remained calm and saw in me what my parents and I could no longer see in myself. Within two months, I went from out-of-control manic to returning to school and getting straight A’s in all AP/ honors classes. Currently, I am in school full time, have a job teaching swim lessons and lifeguarding, and have been stable for the past four months. The experiences of my past have inspired me to become a psychiatrist to help people like myself and my dad. I am so excited about my future and making a difference in the world. It was this realization that made me think back to what my mom once told me. There was a purpose to my tragedy because I was strong enough to find one.
      FLIK Hospitality Group’s Entrepreneurial Council Scholarship
      My mom always told me, “Lucia, I promise you even the darkest tragedies can have purpose” Until recently, I didn’t put much weight in this. I thought it was just something adults said to shine light on tragedy. When I was three, I would have done anything to be like “Daddy”. He was my hero, a stay-at-home dad, and we were inseparable. I wanted to be just like him. But at 5, the dad I had started changing. Daddy was “napping’ more while Mommy was at work. He didn’t want to play with us anymore. One night, I was woken up by more loud screaming. I went into my parent’s room and I saw a man with the most evil eyes screaming at my mother that he would kill her. My once strong and brave mother seemed terrified and weak. The man looked familiar. I murmured, “Daddy?” The man turned to me, his eyes softened and he spoke sweetly to me as if nothing had happened. I hardly noticed Mommy leaving the room, but soon I heard the shuffling footsteps of police officers entering our house. That would be the last night my family was together. I spent the next few years of my life living in fear and uncertainty. I learned things that a child should never have to know: code words that meant to call 911, that safety drills were used for more than just tornadoes, and that I had something called PTSD. Despite all of this, I kept going. I thought I had finally put the past behind me, little did I know I would soon find it necessary to pull upon the strength and resilience I had learned as a child. In 2019, I entered high school taking math, science and English classes 2-4 years above my grade level. The beginning of my junior year, I qualified as a National Merit Hispanic Scholar. Then, in January of my Junior year, my world came crashing down once again. I went from a Type A, high functioning student, to a person in the midst of a manic episode with psychotic features. At that point, I had no idea I was bipolar, nor did I realize I had most likely inherited it from my father, who I then learned was also bipolar. The fight to control my mania and get proper medication was a long battle. It would take two inpatient hospital stays, three partial hospitalizations, three outpatient treatment programs, and five different psychiatrists to finally get my medication under control. I am finally at a place where I feel like I am triumphing over my bipolar. While in my third partial hospitalization program, I finally met the psychiatrist that would unlock the key to treating my bipolar. While other doctors were recommending I be placed in a residential program, Dr. Guitierez remained calm and saw in me what my parents and I could no longer see in myself. Within two months, I went from out-of-control manic to returning to school and getting straight A’s in all AP/ honors classes. Currently, I am in school full time, have a job teaching swim lessons and lifeguarding, and have been stable for the past four months. The experiences of my past have inspired me to become a psychiatrist to help people like myself and my dad. I am so excited about my future and making a difference in the world. It was this realization that made me think back to what my mom once told me. There was a purpose to my tragedy because I was strong enough to find one.
      Net Impact Berkeley Social Impact Scholarship
      My mom always told me, “Lucia, I promise you even the darkest tragedies can have purpose” Until recently, I didn’t put much weight in this. I thought it was just something adults said to shine light on tragedy. When I was three, I would have done anything to be like “Daddy”. He was my hero, a stay-at-home dad, and we were inseparable. I wanted to be just like him. But at 5, the dad I had started changing. Daddy was “napping’ more while Mommy was at work. He didn’t want to play with us anymore. One night, I was woken up by more loud screaming. I went into my parent’s room and I saw a man with the most evil eyes screaming at my mother that he would kill her. My once strong and brave mother seemed terrified and weak. The man looked familiar. I murmured, “Daddy?” The man turned to me, his eyes softened and he spoke sweetly to me as if nothing had happened. I hardly noticed Mommy leaving the room, but soon I heard the shuffling footsteps of police officers entering our house. That would be the last night my family was together. I spent the next few years of my life living in fear and uncertainty. I learned things that a child should never have to know: code words that meant to call 911, that safety drills were used for more than just tornadoes, and that I had something called PTSD. Despite all of this, I kept going. I thought I had finally put the past behind me, little did I know I would soon find it necessary to pull upon the strength and resilience I had learned as a child. In 2019, I entered high school taking math, science and English classes 2-4 years above my grade level. The beginning of my junior year, I qualified as a National Merit Hispanic Scholar. Then, in January of my Junior year, my world came crashing down once again. I went from a Type A, high functioning student, to a person in the midst of a manic episode with psychotic features. At that point, I had no idea I was bipolar, nor did I realize I had most likely inherited it from my father, who I then learned was also bipolar. The fight to control my mania and get proper medication was a long battle. It would take two inpatient hospital stays, three partial hospitalizations, three outpatient treatment programs, and five different psychiatrists to finally get my medication under control. I am finally at a place where I feel like I am triumphing over my bipolar. While in my third partial hospitalization program, I finally met the psychiatrist that would unlock the key to treating my bipolar. While other doctors were recommending I be placed in a residential program, Dr. Guitierez remained calm and saw in me what my parents and I could no longer see in myself. Within two months, I went from out-of-control manic to returning to school and getting straight A’s in all AP/ honors classes. Currently, I am in school full time, have a job teaching swim lessons and lifeguarding, and have been stable for the past four months. The experiences of my past have inspired me to become a psychiatrist to help people like myself and my dad. I am so excited about my future and making a difference in the world. It was this realization that made me think back to what my mom once told me. There was a purpose to my tragedy because I was strong enough to find one.
      “I Matter” Scholarship
      My mom always told me, “Lucia, I promise you even the darkest tragedies can have purpose” Until recently, I didn’t put much weight in this. I thought it was just something adults said to shine light on tragedy. When I was three, I would have done anything to be like “Daddy”. He was my hero, a stay-at-home dad, and we were inseparable. I wanted to be just like him. But at 5, the dad I had started changing. Daddy was “napping’ more while Mommy was at work. He didn’t want to play with us anymore. One night, I was woken up by more loud screaming. I went into my parent’s room and I saw a man with the most evil eyes screaming at my mother that he would kill her. My once strong and brave mother seemed terrified and weak. The man looked familiar. I murmured, “Daddy?” The man turned to me, his eyes softened and he spoke sweetly to me as if nothing had happened. I hardly noticed Mommy leaving the room, but soon I heard the shuffling footsteps of police officers entering our house. That would be the last night my family was together. I spent the next few years of my life living in fear and uncertainty. I learned things that a child should never have to know: code words that meant to call 911, that safety drills were used for more than just tornadoes, and that I had something called PTSD. Despite all of this, I kept going. I thought I had finally put the past behind me, little did I know I would soon find it necessary to pull upon the strength and resilience I had learned as a child. In 2019, I entered high school taking math, science and English classes 2-4 years above my grade level. The beginning of my junior year, I qualified as a National Merit Hispanic Scholar. Then, in January of my Junior year, my world came crashing down once again. I went from a Type A, high functioning student, to a person in the midst of a manic episode with psychotic features. At that point, I had no idea I was bipolar, nor did I realize I had most likely inherited it from my father, who I then learned was also bipolar. The fight to control my mania and get proper medication was a long battle. It would take two inpatient hospital stays, three partial hospitalizations, three outpatient treatment programs, and five different psychiatrists to finally get my medication under control. I am finally at a place where I feel like I am triumphing over my bipolar. While in my third partial hospitalization program, I finally met the psychiatrist that would unlock the key to treating my bipolar. While other doctors were recommending I be placed in a residential program, Dr. Guitierez remained calm and saw in me what my parents and I could no longer see in myself. Within two months, I went from out-of-control manic to returning to school and getting straight A’s in all AP/ honors classes. Currently, I am in school full time, have a job teaching swim lessons and lifeguarding, and have been stable for the past four months. The experiences of my past have inspired me to become a psychiatrist to help people like myself and my dad. I am so excited about my future and making a difference in the world. It was this realization that made me think back to what my mom once told me. There was a purpose to my tragedy because I was strong enough to find one.
      Humanize LLC Gives In Honor of Shirley Kelley Scholarship
      My mom always told me, “Lucia, I promise you even the darkest tragedies can have purpose” Until recently, I didn’t put much weight in this. I thought it was just something adults said to shine light on tragedy. When I was three, I would have done anything to be like “Daddy”. He was my hero, a stay-at-home dad, and we were inseparable. I wanted to be just like him. But at 5, the dad I had started changing. Daddy was “napping’ more while Mommy was at work. He didn’t want to play with us anymore. One night, I was woken up by more loud screaming. I went into my parent’s room and I saw a man with the most evil eyes screaming at my mother that he would kill her. My once strong and brave mother seemed terrified and weak. The man looked familiar. I murmured, “Daddy?” The man turned to me, his eyes softened and he spoke sweetly to me as if nothing had happened. I hardly noticed Mommy leaving the room, but soon I heard the shuffling footsteps of police officers entering our house. That would be the last night my family was together. I spent the next few years of my life living in fear and uncertainty. I learned things that a child should never have to know: code words that meant to call 911, that safety drills were used for more than just tornadoes, and that I had something called PTSD. Despite all of this, I kept going. I thought I had finally put the past behind me, little did I know I would soon find it necessary to pull upon the strength and resilience I had learned as a child. In 2019, I entered high school taking math, science and English classes 2-4 years above my grade level. The beginning of my junior year, I qualified as a National Merit Hispanic Scholar. Then, in January of my Junior year, my world came crashing down once again. I went from a Type A, high functioning student, to a person in the midst of a manic episode with psychotic features. At that point, I had no idea I was bipolar, nor did I realize I had most likely inherited it from my father, who I then learned was also bipolar. The fight to control my mania and get proper medication was a long battle. It would take two inpatient hospital stays, three partial hospitalizations, three outpatient treatment programs, and five different psychiatrists to finally get my medication under control. I am finally at a place where I feel like I am triumphing over my bipolar. While in my third partial hospitalization program, I finally met the psychiatrist that would unlock the key to treating my bipolar. While other doctors were recommending I be placed in a residential program, Dr. Guitierez remained calm and saw in me what my parents and I could no longer see in myself. Within two months, I went from out-of-control manic to returning to school and getting straight A’s in all AP/ honors classes. Currently, I am in school full time, have a job teaching swim lessons and lifeguarding, and have been stable for the past four months. The experiences of my past have inspired me to become a psychiatrist to help people like myself and my dad. I am so excited about my future and making a difference in the world. It was this realization that made me think back to what my mom once told me. There was a purpose to my tragedy because I was strong enough to find one.
      Elizabeth Schalk Memorial Scholarship
      My mom always told me, “Lucia, I promise you even the darkest tragedies can have purpose” Until recently, I didn’t put much weight in this. I thought it was just something adults said to shine light on tragedy. When I was three, I would have done anything to be like “Daddy”. He was my hero, a stay-at-home dad, and we were inseparable. I wanted to be just like him. But at 5, the dad I had started changing. Daddy was “napping’ more while Mommy was at work. He didn’t want to play with us anymore. One night, I was woken up by more loud screaming. I went into my parent’s room and I saw a man with the most evil eyes screaming at my mother that he would kill her. My once strong and brave mother seemed terrified and weak. The man looked familiar. I murmured, “Daddy?” The man turned to me, his eyes softened and he spoke sweetly to me as if nothing had happened. I hardly noticed Mommy leaving the room, but soon I heard the shuffling footsteps of police officers entering our house. That would be the last night my family was together. I spent the next few years of my life living in fear and uncertainty. I learned things that a child should never have to know: code words that meant to call 911, that safety drills were used for more than just tornadoes, and that I had something called PTSD. Despite all of this, I kept going. I thought I had finally put the past behind me, little did I know I would soon find it necessary to pull upon the strength and resilience I had learned as a child. In 2019, I entered high school taking math, science and English classes 2-4 years above my grade level. The beginning of my junior year, I qualified as a National Merit Hispanic Scholar. Then, in January of my Junior year, my world came crashing down once again. I went from a Type A, high functioning student, to a person in the midst of a manic episode with psychotic features. At that point, I had no idea I was bipolar, nor did I realize I had most likely inherited it from my father, who I then learned was also bipolar. The fight to control my mania and get proper medication was a long battle. It would take two inpatient hospital stays, three partial hospitalizations, three outpatient treatment programs, and five different psychiatrists to finally get my medication under control. I am finally at a place where I feel like I am triumphing over my bipolar. While in my third partial hospitalization program, I finally met the psychiatrist that would unlock the key to treating my bipolar. While other doctors were recommending I be placed in a residential program, Dr. Guitierez remained calm and saw in me what my parents and I could no longer see in myself. Within two months, I went from out-of-control manic to returning to school and getting straight A’s in all AP/ honors classes. Currently, I am in school full time, have a job teaching swim lessons and lifeguarding, and have been stable for the past four months. The experiences of my past have inspired me to become a psychiatrist to help people like myself and my dad. I am so excited about my future and making a difference in the world. It was this realization that made me think back to what my mom once told me. There was a purpose to my tragedy because I was strong enough to find one.
      Maverick Grill and Saloon Scholarship
      My mom always told me, “Lucia, I promise you even the darkest tragedies can have purpose” Until recently, I didn’t put much weight in this. I thought it was just something adults said to shine light on tragedy. When I was three, I would have done anything to be like “Daddy”. He was my hero, a stay-at-home dad, and we were inseparable. I wanted to be just like him. But at 5, the dad I had started changing. Daddy was “napping’ more while Mommy was at work. He didn’t want to play with us anymore. One night, I was woken up by more loud screaming. I went into my parent’s room and I saw a man with the most evil eyes screaming at my mother that he would kill her. My once strong and brave mother seemed terrified and weak. The man looked familiar. I murmured, “Daddy?” The man turned to me, his eyes softened and he spoke sweetly to me as if nothing had happened. I hardly noticed Mommy leaving the room, but soon I heard the shuffling footsteps of police officers entering our house. That would be the last night my family was together. I spent the next few years of my life living in fear and uncertainty. I learned things that a child should never have to know: code words that meant to call 911, that safety drills were used for more than just tornadoes, and that I had something called PTSD. Despite all of this, I kept going. I thought I had finally put the past behind me, little did I know I would soon find it necessary to pull upon the strength and resilience I had learned as a child. In 2019, I entered high school taking math, science and English classes 2-4 years above my grade level. The beginning of my junior year, I qualified as a National Merit Hispanic Scholar. Then, in January of my Junior year, my world came crashing down once again. I went from a Type A, high functioning student, to a person in the midst of a manic episode with psychotic features. At that point, I had no idea I was bipolar, nor did I realize I had most likely inherited it from my father, who I then learned was also bipolar. The fight to control my mania and get proper medication was a long battle. It would take two inpatient hospital stays, three partial hospitalizations, three outpatient treatment programs, and five different psychiatrists to finally get my medication under control. I am finally at a place where I feel like I am triumphing over my bipolar. While in my third partial hospitalization program, I finally met the psychiatrist that would unlock the key to treating my bipolar. While other doctors were recommending I be placed in a residential program, Dr. Guitierez remained calm and saw in me what my parents and I could no longer see in myself. Within two months, I went from out-of-control manic to returning to school and getting straight A’s in all AP/ honors classes. Currently, I am in school full time, have a job teaching swim lessons and lifeguarding, and have been stable for the past four months. The experiences of my past have inspired me to become a psychiatrist to help people like myself and my dad. I am so excited about my future and making a difference in the world. It was this realization that made me think back to what my mom once told me. There was a purpose to my tragedy because I was strong enough to find one.
      Most Improved Student Scholarship
      My mom always told me, “Lucia, I promise you even the darkest tragedies can have purpose” Until recently, I didn’t put much weight in this. I thought it was just something adults said to shine light on tragedy. When I was three, I would have done anything to be like “Daddy”. He was my hero, a stay-at-home dad, and we were inseparable. I wanted to be just like him. But at 5, the dad I had started changing. Daddy was “napping’ more while Mommy was at work. He didn’t want to play with us anymore. One night, I was woken up by more loud screaming. I went into my parent’s room and I saw a man with the most evil eyes screaming at my mother that he would kill her. My once strong and brave mother seemed terrified and weak. The man looked familiar. I murmured, “Daddy?” The man turned to me, his eyes softened and he spoke sweetly to me as if nothing had happened. I hardly noticed Mommy leaving the room, but soon I heard the shuffling footsteps of police officers entering our house. That would be the last night my family was together. I spent the next few years of my life living in fear and uncertainty. I learned things that a child should never have to know: code words that meant to call 911, that safety drills were used for more than just tornadoes, and that I had something called PTSD. Despite all of this, I kept going. I thought I had finally put the past behind me, little did I know I would soon find it necessary to pull upon the strength and resilience I had learned as a child. In 2019, I entered high school taking math, science and English classes 2-4 years above my grade level. The beginning of my junior year, I qualified as a National Merit Hispanic Scholar. Then, in January of my Junior year, my world came crashing down once again. I went from a Type A, high functioning student, to a person in the midst of a manic episode with psychotic features. At that point, I had no idea I was bipolar, nor did I realize I had most likely inherited it from my father, who I then learned was also bipolar. The fight to control my mania and get proper medication was a long battle. It would take two inpatient hospital stays, three partial hospitalizations, three outpatient treatment programs, and five different psychiatrists to finally get my medication under control. I am finally at a place where I feel like I am triumphing over my bipolar. While in my third partial hospitalization program, I finally met the psychiatrist that would unlock the key to treating my bipolar. While other doctors were recommending I be placed in a residential program, Dr. Guitierez remained calm and saw in me what my parents and I could no longer see in myself. Within two months, I went from out-of-control manic to returning to school and getting straight A’s in all AP/ honors classes. Currently, I am in school full time, have a job teaching swim lessons and lifeguarding, and have been stable for the past four months. The experiences of my past have inspired me to become a psychiatrist to help people like myself and my dad. I am so excited about my future and making a difference in the world. It was this realization that made me think back to what my mom once told me. There was a purpose to my tragedy because I was strong enough to find one.
      Richard Neumann Scholarship
      My mom always told me, “Lucia, I promise you even the darkest tragedies can have purpose” Until recently, I didn’t put much weight in this. I thought it was just something adults said to shine light on tragedy. When I was three, I would have done anything to be like “Daddy”. He was my hero, a stay-at-home dad, and we were inseparable. I wanted to be just like him. But at 5, the dad I had started changing. Daddy was “napping’ more while Mommy was at work. He didn’t want to play with us anymore. One night, I was woken up by more loud screaming. I went into my parent’s room and I saw a man with the most evil eyes screaming at my mother that he would kill her. My once strong and brave mother seemed terrified and weak. The man looked familiar. I murmured, “Daddy?” The man turned to me, his eyes softened and he spoke sweetly to me as if nothing had happened. I hardly noticed Mommy leaving the room, but soon I heard the shuffling footsteps of police officers entering our house. That would be the last night my family was together. I spent the next few years of my life living in fear and uncertainty. I learned things that a child should never have to know: code words that meant to call 911, that safety drills were used for more than just tornadoes, and that I had something called PTSD. Despite all of this, I kept going. I thought I had finally put the past behind me, little did I know I would soon find it necessary to pull upon the strength and resilience I had learned as a child. In 2019, I entered high school taking math, science and English classes 2-4 years above my grade level. The beginning of my junior year, I qualified as a National Merit Hispanic Scholar. Then, in January of my Junior year, my world came crashing down once again. I went from a Type A, high functioning student, to a person in the midst of a manic episode with psychotic features. At that point, I had no idea I was bipolar, nor did I realize I had most likely inherited it from my father, who I then learned was also bipolar. The fight to control my mania and get proper medication was a long battle. It would take two inpatient hospital stays, three partial hospitalizations, three outpatient treatment programs, and five different psychiatrists to finally get my medication under control. I am finally at a place where I feel like I am triumphing over my bipolar. While in my third partial hospitalization program, I finally met the psychiatrist that would unlock the key to treating my bipolar. While other doctors were recommending I be placed in a residential program, Dr. Guitierez remained calm and saw in me what my parents and I could no longer see in myself. Within two months, I went from out-of-control manic to returning to school and getting straight A’s in all AP/ honors classes. Currently, I am in school full time, have a job teaching swim lessons and lifeguarding, and have been stable for the past four months. The experiences of my past have inspired me to become a psychiatrist to help people like myself and my dad. I am so excited about my future and making a difference in the world. It was this realization that made me think back to what my mom once told me. There was a purpose to my tragedy because I was strong enough to find one.
      Paige's Promise Scholarship
      My mom always told me, “Lucia, I promise you even the darkest tragedies can have purpose” Until recently, I didn’t put much weight in this. I thought it was just something adults said to shine light on tragedy. When I was three, I would have done anything to be like “Daddy”. He was my hero, a stay at home dad, and we were inseparable. I wanted to be just like him, including the time I chopped off all my hair so I could have a short haircut just like him. My mom likes to share how I proudly walked through the door after my haircut and announced, “Now, I look beautiful just like Daddy!” But at 5, the dad I had started changing. Daddy was “napping’ more while Mommy was at work. He didn’t want to play with us anymore and told me he needed my help. At the time, my sister was only two and my brother was just an infant so I learned how to change diapers, make bottles, and read bedtime stories to my siblings. Meanwhile, his two hour “naps” turned into full days of laying on the coach. One night I was woken up by more loud screaming. I went into my parents room and I saw a man with the most evil eyes screaming at my mother that he would kill her. My once strong and brave mother seemed terrified and weak. The man looked familiar. I murmured, “Daddy?” The man turned to me, his eyes softened and he spoke sweetly to me as if nothing had happened. I hardly noticed Mommy leaving the room, but soon I heard the shuffling footsteps of police officers entering our house. That would be the last night my family was together. I spent the next few years of my life living in fear and uncertainty. I learned things that a child should never have to know: code words that meant to call 911, that safety drills were used for more than just tornadoes, and that I had something called PTSD. Despite all of this, I kept going. With orders of protection in place and safety plans created, I returned to Kindergarten that Monday. When I would have bursts of anger, my mom would say “I love you and I’m sorry for what has happened, but I will not let what happened define you.” She would remind me of how I am the reason my siblings are safe, how I was a hero just like the one I once saw in my dad. This experience taught me the resilience and responsibility that I carry with me today. As I got older, my mom was able to explain to me that my dad had a mental illness. That the doctors had put him on lots of medication, that he wasn’t supposed to drink alcohol on but he did. This created irreparable brain damage and is what caused his erratic behavior. I realized recently that I want to become a psychiatrist to help people like my dad. It was this realization that made me think back to what my mom once told me. There was a purpose to my tragedy because I was strong enough to find one.
      Ethel Hayes Destigmatization of Mental Health Scholarship
      My mom always told me, “Lucia, I promise you even the darkest tragedies can have purpose” Until recently, I didn’t put much weight in this. I thought it was just something adults said to shine light on tragedy. When I was three, I would have done anything to be like “Daddy”. He was my hero, a stay at home dad, and we were inseparable. I wanted to be just like him, including the time I chopped off all my hair so I could have a short haircut just like him. My mom likes to share how I proudly walked through the door after my haircut and announced, “Now, I look beautiful just like Daddy!” But at 5, the dad I had started changing. Daddy was “napping’ more while Mommy was at work. He didn’t want to play with us anymore and told me he needed my help. At the time, my sister was only two and my brother was just an infant so I learned how to change diapers, make bottles, and read bedtime stories to my siblings. Meanwhile, his two hour “naps” turned into full days of laying on the coach. One night, I was woken up by more loud screaming. I went into my parent’s room and I saw a man with the most evil eyes screaming at my mother that he would kill her. My once strong and brave mother seemed terrified and weak. The man looked familiar. I murmured, “Daddy?” The man turned to me, his eyes softened and he spoke sweetly to me as if nothing had happened. I hardly noticed Mommy leaving the room, but soon I heard the shuffling footsteps of police officers entering our house. That would be the last night my family was together. I spent the next few years of my life living in fear and uncertainty. I learned things that a child should never have to know: code words that meant to call 911, that safety drills were used for more than just tornadoes, and that I had something called PTSD. Despite all of this, I kept going. With orders of protection in place and safety plans created, I returned to Kindergarten that Monday. When I would have bursts of anger, my mom would say “I love you and I’m sorry for what has happened, but I will not let what happened define you.” She would remind me of how I am the reason my siblings are safe, how I was a hero just like the one I once saw in my dad. I thought I had finally put the past behind me, little did I know I would soon find it necessary to pull upon the strength and resilience I had learned as a child. In 2019, I entered high school taking math, science and English classes 2-4 years above my grade level. The beginning of my junior year, I took the PSAT-NMSQT and qualified as a National Merit Hispanic Scholar. Then, in January of my Junior year, my world came crashing down once again. I went from a Type A, high functioning student, to a person in the midst of a manic episode with psychotic features. At that point, I had no idea I was bipolar, nor did I realize I had most likely inherited it from my father, who I then learned was also bipolar. The fight to control my mania and get proper medication was a long battle. It would take two inpatient hospital stays, three partial hospitalizations, three outpatient treatment programs, and five different psychiatrists to finally get my medication under control. I am finally at a place where I feel like I am finally triumphing over my bipolar. While in my third partial hospitalization program, I finally met the psychiatrist that would unlock the key to treating my bipolar. While other doctors were recommending I be placed in a residential program, Dr. Guitierez remained calm and saw in me what my parents and I could no longer see in myself. Within two months, I went from out of control manic to returning to school and getting straight A’s in all AP and honors classes. Currently I am in school full time, have a job teaching swim lessons and lifeguarding, and have been stable for the past four months. The experiences of my past have inspired me to become a psychiatrist to help people like myself and my dad. I applied and was admitted to the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign as a Neuroscience/Premed Major. I am so excited about my future and making a difference in the world. It was this realization that made me think back to what my mom once told me. There was a purpose to my tragedy because I was strong enough to find one.
      Jake Thomas Williams Memorial Scholarship
      My mom always told me, “Lucia, I promise you even the darkest tragedies can have purpose” Until recently, I didn’t put much weight in this. I thought it was just something adults said to shine light on tragedy. When I was three, I would have done anything to be like “Daddy”. He was my hero, a stay-at-home dad, and we were inseparable. I wanted to be just like him. But at 5, the dad I had started changing. Daddy was “napping’ more while Mommy was at work. He didn’t want to play with us anymore. One night, I was woken up by more loud screaming. I went into my parent’s room and I saw a man with the most evil eyes screaming at my mother that he would kill her. My once strong and brave mother seemed terrified and weak. The man looked familiar. I murmured, “Daddy?” The man turned to me, his eyes softened and he spoke sweetly to me as if nothing had happened. I hardly noticed Mommy leaving the room, but soon I heard the shuffling footsteps of police officers entering our house. That would be the last night my family was together. I spent the next few years of my life living in fear and uncertainty. I learned things that a child should never have to know: code words that meant to call 911, that safety drills were used for more than just tornadoes, and that I had something called PTSD. Despite all of this, I kept going. I thought I had finally put the past behind me, little did I know I would soon find it necessary to pull upon the strength and resilience I had learned as a child. In 2019, I entered high school taking math, science and English classes 2-4 years above my grade level. The beginning of my junior year, I qualified as a National Merit Hispanic Scholar. Then, in January of my Junior year, my world came crashing down once again. I went from a Type A, high functioning student, to a person in the midst of a manic episode with psychotic features. At that point, I had no idea I was bipolar, nor did I realize I had most likely inherited it from my father, who I then learned was also bipolar. The fight to control my mania and get proper medication was a long battle. It would take two inpatient hospital stays, three partial hospitalizations, three outpatient treatment programs, and five different psychiatrists to finally get my medication under control. I am finally at a place where I feel like I am triumphing over my bipolar. While in my third partial hospitalization program, I finally met the psychiatrist that would unlock the key to treating my bipolar. While other doctors were recommending I be placed in a residential program, Dr. Guitierez remained calm and saw in me what my parents and I could no longer see in myself. Within two months, I went from out-of-control manic to returning to school and getting straight A’s in all AP/ honors classes. Currently, I am in school full time, have a job teaching swim lessons and lifeguarding, and have been stable for the past four months. The experiences of my past have inspired me to become a psychiatrist to help people like myself and my dad. I am so excited about my future and making a difference in the world. It was this realization that made me think back to what my mom once told me. There was a purpose to my tragedy because I was strong enough to find one.
      Andrew Perez Mental Illness/Suicidal Awareness Education Scholarship
      My mom always told me, “Lucia, I promise you even the darkest tragedies can have purpose” Until recently, I didn’t put much weight in this. I thought it was just something adults said to shine light on tragedy. When I was three, I would have done anything to be like “Daddy”. He was my hero, a stay-at-home dad, and we were inseparable. I wanted to be just like him. But at 5, the dad I had started changing. Daddy was “napping’ more while Mommy was at work. He didn’t want to play with us anymore. One night, I was woken up by more loud screaming. I went into my parent’s room and I saw a man with the most evil eyes screaming at my mother that he would kill her. My once strong and brave mother seemed terrified and weak. The man looked familiar. I murmured, “Daddy?” The man turned to me, his eyes softened and he spoke sweetly to me as if nothing had happened. I hardly noticed Mommy leaving the room, but soon I heard the shuffling footsteps of police officers entering our house. That would be the last night my family was together. I spent the next few years of my life living in fear and uncertainty. I learned things that a child should never have to know: code words that meant to call 911, that safety drills were used for more than just tornadoes, and that I had something called PTSD. Despite all of this, I kept going. I thought I had finally put the past behind me, little did I know I would soon find it necessary to pull upon the strength and resilience I had learned as a child. In 2019, I entered high school taking math, science and English classes 2-4 years above my grade level. The beginning of my junior year, I qualified as a National Merit Hispanic Scholar. Then, in January of my Junior year, my world came crashing down once again. I went from a Type A, high functioning student, to a person in the midst of a manic episode with psychotic features. At that point, I had no idea I was bipolar, nor did I realize I had most likely inherited it from my father, who I then learned was also bipolar. The fight to control my mania and get proper medication was a long battle. It would take two inpatient hospital stays, three partial hospitalizations, three outpatient treatment programs, and five different psychiatrists to finally get my medication under control. I am finally at a place where I feel like I am triumphing over my bipolar. While in my third partial hospitalization program, I finally met the psychiatrist that would unlock the key to treating my bipolar. While other doctors were recommending I be placed in a residential program, Dr. Guitierez remained calm and saw in me what my parents and I could no longer see in myself. Within two months, I went from out-of-control manic to returning to school and getting straight A’s in all AP/ honors classes. Currently, I am in school full time, have a job teaching swim lessons and lifeguarding, and have been stable for the past four months. The experiences of my past have inspired me to become a psychiatrist to help people like myself and my dad. I am so excited about my future and making a difference in the world. It was this realization that made me think back to what my mom once told me. There was a purpose to my tragedy because I was strong enough to find one.
      Mental Health Importance Scholarship
      My mom always told me, “Lucia, I promise you even the darkest tragedies can have purpose” Until recently, I didn’t put much weight in this. I thought it was just something adults said to shine light on tragedy. When I was three, I would have done anything to be like “Daddy”. He was my hero, a stay-at-home dad, and we were inseparable. I wanted to be just like him. But at 5, the dad I had started changing. Daddy was “napping’ more while Mommy was at work. He didn’t want to play with us anymore. One night, I was woken up by more loud screaming. I went into my parent’s room and I saw a man with the most evil eyes screaming at my mother that he would kill her. My once strong and brave mother seemed terrified and weak. The man looked familiar. I murmured, “Daddy?” The man turned to me, his eyes softened and he spoke sweetly to me as if nothing had happened. I hardly noticed Mommy leaving the room, but soon I heard the shuffling footsteps of police officers entering our house. That would be the last night my family was together. I spent the next few years of my life living in fear and uncertainty. I learned things that a child should never have to know: code words that meant to call 911, that safety drills were used for more than just tornadoes, and that I had something called PTSD. Despite all of this, I kept going. I thought I had finally put the past behind me, little did I know I would soon find it necessary to pull upon the strength and resilience I had learned as a child. In 2019, I entered high school taking math, science and English classes 2-4 years above my grade level. The beginning of my junior year, I qualified as a National Merit Hispanic Scholar. Then, in January of my Junior year, my world came crashing down once again. I went from a Type A, high functioning student, to a person in the midst of a manic episode with psychotic features. At that point, I had no idea I was bipolar, nor did I realize I had most likely inherited it from my father, who I then learned was also bipolar. The fight to control my mania and get proper medication was a long battle. It would take two inpatient hospital stays, three partial hospitalizations, three outpatient treatment programs, and five different psychiatrists to finally get my medication under control. I am finally at a place where I feel like I am triumphing over my bipolar. While in my third partial hospitalization program, I finally met the psychiatrist that would unlock the key to treating my bipolar. While other doctors were recommending I be placed in a residential program, Dr. Guitierez remained calm and saw in me what my parents and I could no longer see in myself. Within two months, I went from out-of-control manic to returning to school and getting straight A’s in all AP/ honors classes. Currently, I am in school full time, have a job teaching swim lessons and lifeguarding, and have been stable for the past four months. The experiences of my past have inspired me to become a psychiatrist to help people like myself and my dad. I am so excited about my future and making a difference in the world. It was this realization that made me think back to what my mom once told me. There was a purpose to my tragedy because I was strong enough to find one.
      Brian J Boley Memorial Scholarship
      My mom always told me, “Lucia, I promise you even the darkest tragedies can have purpose” Until recently, I didn’t put much weight in this. I thought it was just something adults said to shine light on tragedy. When I was three, I would have done anything to be like “Daddy”. He was my hero, a stay-at-home dad, and we were inseparable. I wanted to be just like him. But at 5, the dad I had started changing. Daddy was “napping’ more while Mommy was at work. He didn’t want to play with us anymore. One night, I was woken up by more loud screaming. I went into my parent’s room and I saw a man with the most evil eyes screaming at my mother that he would kill her. My once strong and brave mother seemed terrified and weak. The man looked familiar. I murmured, “Daddy?” The man turned to me, his eyes softened and he spoke sweetly to me as if nothing had happened. I hardly noticed Mommy leaving the room, but soon I heard the shuffling footsteps of police officers entering our house. That would be the last night my family was together. I spent the next few years of my life living in fear and uncertainty. I learned things that a child should never have to know: code words that meant to call 911, that safety drills were used for more than just tornadoes, and that I had something called PTSD. Despite all of this, I kept going. I thought I had finally put the past behind me, little did I know I would soon find it necessary to pull upon the strength and resilience I had learned as a child. In 2019, I entered high school taking math, science and English classes 2-4 years above my grade level. The beginning of my junior year, I qualified as a National Merit Hispanic Scholar. Then, in January of my Junior year, my world came crashing down once again. I went from a Type A, high functioning student, to a person in the midst of a manic episode with psychotic features. At that point, I had no idea I was bipolar, nor did I realize I had most likely inherited it from my father, who I then learned was also bipolar. The fight to control my mania and get proper medication was a long battle. It would take two inpatient hospital stays, three partial hospitalizations, three outpatient treatment programs, and five different psychiatrists to finally get my medication under control. I am finally at a place where I feel like I am triumphing over my bipolar. While in my third partial hospitalization program, I finally met the psychiatrist that would unlock the key to treating my bipolar. While other doctors were recommending I be placed in a residential program, Dr. Guitierez remained calm and saw in me what my parents and I could no longer see in myself. Within two months, I went from out-of-control manic to returning to school and getting straight A’s in all AP/ honors classes. Currently, I am in school full time, have a job teaching swim lessons and lifeguarding, and have been stable for the past four months. The experiences of my past have inspired me to become a psychiatrist to help people like myself and my dad. I am so excited about my future and making a difference in the world. It was this realization that made me think back to what my mom once told me. There was a purpose to my tragedy because I was strong enough to find one.