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Meghan Mirabal

805

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Finalist

Bio

I am a professional and student with demonstrated history of work in the acute medical field as well as mental healthcare industry. I am passionate about helping others and have dedicated a large portion of my life as well as studies to service. I currently obtain a Bachelors of Psychology with a concentration in Substance Abuse & Addiction Counseling from The University of New Mexico as well as a CADC-III (Certified Alcohol Drug Counselor) licensure through the state of CA - CCAPP. I am currently enrolled at Hope International University in Fullerton, CA pursuing licensure as a Family Marriage Therapist (MFT) specializing in the treatment of trauma related modalities while focusing on the First Responder/Veteran population in my current job role as a Mental Health Case Manager/Substance Abuse Counselor. I have future goals of opening up my own clinic and pursuing a PsyD or PHD to further my education and ability to help others in need who have suffered from addiction, mental illness, and trauma.

Education

Hope International University

Master's degree program
2022 - 2024

New Mexico State University-Main Campus

Bachelor's degree program
2017 - 2021
  • Majors:
    • Psychology, General

Miscellaneous

  • Desired degree level:

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

  • Graduate schools of interest:

  • Transfer schools of interest:

  • Majors of interest:

  • Not planning to go to medical school
  • Career

    • Dream career field:

      Mental Health Care

    • Dream career goals:

      Therapist

    • Mental Health Case Manager

      First Responder Wellness
      2021 – Present3 years

    Sports

    Soccer

    Varsity
    2014 – 20173 years

    Research

    • Neurobiology and Neurosciences

      Center for Brain Recovery and Repair — Research Assistant
      2019 – 2021

    Public services

    • Volunteering

      Someone Cares Food Kitchen — Volunteer
      2023 – Present
    Meaningful Existence Scholarship
    I am passionate about pursuing a career in therapy because the passion to help support others in need has always been of high importance to me. My childhood was flavorful, to say the least, surrounding experiences, experiences later in life I would come to find out were unhealthy, painful, and abnormal. I will never forget my undergraduate class in Psychology at the University of New Mexico in Albuquerque. I was learning about childhood development and gathering awareness of mental health disorders that arise with specific factors in a home. My psychology teacher encouraged everyone in the class to take the ACE (adverse childhood experience) survey to help bring awareness to our background as well as increase our insight. I will never forget the moment I looked at my ACE score of 8 and felt sick to my stomach. I almost transported back in time to when I was a little girl feeling stuck, anxious, and unsure of what to predict about the people I was around who were struggling with undiagnosed mental health issues. I believe from this point on I was dedicated to supporting the mental health community and bringing awareness to specific cultural backgrounds surrounding the importance of mental health practices. I am Hispanic (Spanish) and growing up my family never discussed mental health support or demonstrated healthy practices. Today, much of my family continues to live with unhealthy patterns and behave in abnormal ways they are unaware of. I want to bring awareness and exposure to my Hispanic/Spanish background and help take away the stigma of not seeking mental health services. I believe with further advancement in my academics as well as work experience I can bring forth helpful services to the mental health community, specifically, my Spanish background. I hold immense pain in my heart as unfortunately several of my family members are walking this Earth without being supported by mental health services. Last year, my cousin passed away from a drug overdose and this deeply impacted me. I want to break the stigma surrounding mental health in the Hispanic culture and would love to provide knowledge, authentic, and genuine services to people who have experienced adverse childhood as well as present-day experiences that have kept them stuck. Today, I can confidently say I am continuing my therapy journey with my therapist and find a great sense of peace as well as gratitude for becoming vulnerable and healing the pain I have been carrying, therapy is important - it's life saving.
    Book Lovers Scholarship
    If I could have everyone in the world read just one book, I would encourage them to read The Four Agreements by Don Miguel Ruiz. The reason I would choose this specific book for the world to have access to surrounds the basic teachings of life, communication, understanding, and self-awareness Don Miguel Ruiz offers readers in this book. I remember the first time I read this book I was taken aback by the message and the overall level my mindset shifted to when it comes to people and things outside of my control. I believe the world gets caught up in the opinions and distractions of others - often taking us away from solitude and peace. I think a book that offers grounding techniques, and mindset perspectives, and encourages readers to set their mindset up for success is the world worth reading. Don Miguel Ruiz is an excellent author and I would recommend any of his books for people to read. Upon learning the four agreements - don't take anything personal has yet to be the agreement I must continue to practice. Often, I take people's emotions and behaviors personally which does not allow me to be present mentally as well as physically. The Four Agreements offers an array of support to balance and growth which our world desperately needs more of to improve. I make it a point to reread this book often because the basic principles discussed are powerful as well as influential towards my personal growth. Everyone in the world must read the four agreements to access the present moment.
    Mental Health Importance Scholarship
    I have spent the last five to six years dedicating my educational and work-life experience geared towards mental health. I strongly believe mental health is one of the most important aspects a person can pay attention to in their life. My prior work experience consists of working alongside the COVID-19 pandemic as a nursing assistant. I witnessed a great deal of death and often found myself hopeless, depressed, full of anxiety, and sleep-deprived. Being involved in the frontlines during this time did not allow first responders to stop their lives and seek help so unfortunately mental health symptoms emerged at an all-time high. I decided to step away from the nursing career and step into psychology focusing on addiction medicine and post-traumatic stress disorder. I have been working in Southern California at a dual-diagnosis treatment center called First Responder Wellness where we specifically treat first responders who are struggling with their mental health symptoms such as depression, anxiety, post-traumatic stress, and overall stress. I feel honored to be giving back differently with my career and lean into mental health. Right now, I am currently pursuing my Master's degree at Hope International University to become a Marriage and Family Therapist. Being a part of this program has allowed me to continue seeing the importance of mental health practices and has also encouraged me to seek out therapy. I have been seeing an outside therapist for around a year and a half now which has allowed me to heal from childhood upbringing experiences, as well as the COVID-19 losses I witnessed. I maintain my mental wellness by setting strong boundaries with my off time, taking time to decompress, and prioritizing self-care. I make it a priority to exercise weekly as well as take my dog Yori on walks along the beach to become centered with nature as well as support the stress load I can feel from time to time. I also continue to see my outside therapist 2x per month to discuss ongoing life stressors as well as continuing to process old events. For me to be the best therapist one day I want to show my clients/patients that prioritizing one's needs is crucial and necessary. I am dedicated to continuing my studies in mental health practices and finding ways to better myself as a person. I do believe in structure and think following a routine as well as planner helps set aside appropriate time to prioritize mental health needs.
    Darclei V. McGregor Memorial Scholarship
    From a young age I have possessed a large amount of empathy and have always found myself gravitating towards service. I grew up in Albuquerque, New Mexico in a predominantly hispanic household under the main care of my grandmother Cecilia Mirabal. My grandmother was hardworking, kind, generous, but above all else loving. My grandmother allowed stability, love, and comfort to exist in my childhood while my parents were going through divorce. Growing up with my grandmother I always kept these values and characteristics close and prided myself as the years passed to dedicate my career to giving back. I wanted to live a life full of purpose and most of all service because at the core of who I am is someone who cares. Entering my first year of college in 2017 I was unsure of what direction to go and what to study so I focused on tackling my prerequisites. One day a family member of mine was admitted into the emergency room where I came across my first interest in a potential career field. I applied to the hospital and was able to advance throughout departments making my way up to ICU and Cardiac Critical care to work as a medical nursing assistant. Before I knew it the world was discovering a severe virus known as COVID-19. While the world shut down my life as well other first responders did not. In fact, our world amplified and beat us down to a mental limitation I was not sure existed until this happened before my eyes. I worked 5, sometimes 6 days a week and incurred massive hours of overtime because the amount of people entering the hospital setting was so overwhelming. Slowly through this process I noticed the little girl who once felt everything, cried for everything was becoming hardened by the day, minute, second. If you saw what I saw, heard what I heard, and felt what I felt you would not want to sleep either or physically couldn’t shut it off. I worked alongside the COVID-19 pandemic for 2 and half years where I witnessed thousands of people die. I felt honor in this and made it appoint to show up every day to serve our people and help my team but I also carried immense pain. Albuquerque, New Mexico was a smaller city which meant many of the people admitted into the hospital I worked at I did know to some capacity. I witnessed old coaches, teachers, neighbors, old colleagues and extended family members die before my eyes. I will never be able to explain the feeling of telling a patient they have to get ventilated because their oxygen is tanking and there is a high possibility they may not wake. Yet, my biggest nightmare happened as one of those patients being my grandmother - Cecilia Mirabal. My grandmother was admitted to the hospital I worked at Presybyterian Hospital with COVID-19 and was sent to the ICU unit where I worked. Due to HIPPA guidelines I was not allowed to be a part of her care but was offered the generous ability to visit with her. Throughout the weeks of my grandmother slowly passing with COVID and losing her ability to breathe I did everything in my power to find the light, the positivity. My entire family blew up my phone at all hours of the day requesting updates, information, and facetime opportunities. I watched my grandmother suffer with COVID-19 for weeks until she finally passed away on January 22, 2022.. After going through the painful loss of my grandmother, I decided to leave the nursing field and focus on psychology, specifically mental health. I noticed my mental health was in a tough place and I was uncomfortable with the way I was treating myself as well as others around me. I sunk into a very depressed state and constantly would wake up in panic with cold sweats. At the time, I found the best decision was moving to another state to possibly find new hope and meaning. Little did I know, mental health follows us wherever we go. I moved to California in May 2021 and landed a mental health job in Newport Beach, California that serves frontline workers, veterans - first responders who struggle with post traumatic stress injury, addiction, and anxiety/depression symptoms. Initially, when I saw this job posting I was ecstatic and energized to apply due to the sole fact of my most recent work background as well as experience. I found another way to give back to a community I know first hand and understand first hand the mental health challenges that arise from experiencing constant loss, sleep deprivation, depression, thoughts of suicide, anxiety, and trauma. In my role as a mental health case manager and substance abuse counselor I allow my clients to show up as they are but guide as well as challenge them for the better. I often use my own personal experience to build safety and rapport which has helped immensely in strengthening the relationship. I am very thankful and appreciative of being accepted into this role and have been with the company First Responder Wellness for two years now. I have worked with thousands first responders in those two years and genuinely feel a passion for this line of work. I want to continue to break the stigma surrounding First Responders not receiving help and decrease the suicide statistic as well as increase awareness within the community. The First Responder population are known as the first to respond to a crisis and the last to receive help. I want to be a part of this change in the culture and further my studies to understand what this population goes through. I want to provide support and resources to family members because they also are going through their own process as their loved one receives treatment/therapy. The value in processing, discussing, and feeling emotions where once upon a time that did not exist. I was at a place that was not capable, I was disassociated from emotions which I know became my survival technique like many of the first responders I meet today. I was experiencing compassion fatigue, complete burnout, and becoming closer to the suicide statistic by the minute. Seeking out a therapist was the best decision I ever made in my life and solely believe that work has saved as well as shaped my life. I am passionate about continuing to serve the First Responder population and have dedicated my past and current studies to enhance my knowledge as well as ability to show up in the room with a client suffering from traumatic incidents. My therapist showing up for me the way she did has empowered me to do the same for my current and future clients. I am currently in my Master’s Program at Hope International University in Fullerton, CA hoping to bring into the Psychology as well mental health world understanding, experience, authenticity, and above all else sincere care. I have a passion for becoming a fully licensed LMFT therapist while specializing in trauma modalities. Over the summer, I was able to participate in an EMDR therapy training which has allowed me growth in my professional as well as educational realm. I have hopes and desires for also pursuing my PsyD or PHD to further continue my knowledge and abilities to help those in need. I have considered joining the Navy after a couple of years of practicing with my LMFT license in California. I do know the future ahead of me is unpredictable but if I can predict one thing that will be continuing to invest in serving those who need it. A life full of purpose, is a life well lived and I plan to continue that mantra as well as mission for myself and grandmother Cecilia Mirabal. I owe my passion and inspiration to her and forever have the utmost gratitude for the values she applied in my daily life of my upbringing. I plan to continue carrying her with me in every session I hold and moments of healing I am able to be a part of. I realized in taking on my own therapeutic journey that the best investment I could give to my clients is true self-care. My days off from work and school are spent enjoying the small moments, spending time with family/friends, taking my dog Yori for walks by the beach, and cooking a good homemade meal. I make sure I hold strong boundaries, and prioritize allowing my body to decompress from the week of painful sessions. If I want to be a true example to my clients I have to be able to practice these small suggestions mysel