For DonorsFor Applicants
user profile avatar

Samuel NIxon

1,645

Bold Points

1x

Finalist

Bio

I have been playing the piano for 13 years and am pursuing a piano performance degree. The instrument has always been a significant part of my life, and I also play the viola and double bass. Apart from music, I have a passion for engineering; however, I decided against going into the field as a career.

Education

Academies of Loudoun

Trade School
2020 - 2022
  • Majors:
    • Engineering, General

Loudoun Valley High School

High School
2020 - 2024

Miscellaneous

  • Desired degree level:

    Master's degree program

  • Majors of interest:

    • Music
  • Not planning to go to medical school
  • Career

    • Dream career field:

      Music

    • Dream career goals:

      Achieve recognition as concert pianist, offer private lessons, and eventually open a private studio

      Research

      • Aerospace, Aeronautical, and Astronautical/Space Engineering

        NASA Hunch — Simulation Designer
        2023 – 2023

      Arts

      • NCVRO Regional Orchestra

        Music
        2022 – 2022
      • Loudoun County All County Orchestra

        Music
        2018 – 2024
      • LVHS Theatre Pit Orchestra

        Theatre
        Into the Woods, Percy Jackson, the Lightning Theif, Songs for a New World, Once Upon a Mattress, Now. Here. This.
        2021 – 2024
      • Ashburn Youth Symphony Orchestra

        Music
        2018 – 2020
      • Loudoun Symphony Youth Orchestra

        Music
        2018 – 2022

      Public services

      • Volunteering

        Hoffman Brothers Ice Cream — Employee
        2023 – 2024
      • Volunteering

        Loudoun County Public LIbrary — Student Volunteer
        2018 – 2020
      Matt Fishman Scholarship
      After acquiring COVID-19 in May of 2021, I developed multiple lasting health conditions that have left a fading scar in both my personal and academic careers. Around late June, a few weeks after my infection had cleared, I developed a variety of unexplained health issues; my symptoms began with an inexplicable urge to constantly move my legs with an unexplainable painful sensation during inactivity. The sensations were more of an annoyance than an issue but rapidly developed into something more. Over the next week, I began to experience unmanageable widespread body pain, alongside a pins-and-needles feeling in my hands and feet. I was left unable to stand, nearly fainting every time I tried; my heart rate would spike to 180 or above while upright, and my adrenal system would go haywire. I was frequently experiencing debilitating migraines, often with excruciating vertigo. My head felt wrapped in cotton, leaving me unable to think, and I became incredibly distant from the world. Before my infection, I was enrolled in a selective specialty engineering school and planned on pursuing a career in the field. Even with plentiful teacher support, my health made it so that I could no longer keep up, and I had to drop out. I was a pianist of eleven years at that time, and I picked up viola and double bass around six years after I had begun. I had to stop playing string instruments entirely and was forced to leave the orchestras I was a member of, which devastated me. Piano was the only passion I could keep active during that time, and I dove into it as a way to cope. Understandably, my mental health collapsed; I became severely depressed and dissociative, and I entirely lost my sense of self-worth. My social life crumbled as I no longer had the energy to keep up with friends. My anxiety became overbearing, and I became highly avoidant of school. At my lowest, I ended up admitted to a mental health facility during the last two weeks of the school year. My mental and physical recoveries have taken extraordinary amounts of well-paced effort, but it has proved fruitful and brought me to a much better place. Through slow and careful reintroduction, I have picked up nearly all of my lost hobbies and instruments, and my physical strength is close to where it was before my infection. I've learned to adapt where I have not fully recovered and now focus intensely on my health. Over this time, I have had to reset myself and have considerably grown. I've relearned who I am and developed an even greater love for my passion of music, one of the only things that got me through the period. Now, I am months away from attending a conservatory to study piano performance and am on track to make my future out of it. Viola and bass are back in my life, and I am back playing in orchestras. While engineering is no longer my career goal, I still engage with it non-academically and keep it part of my life. While going through everything I have over the past few years has been extremely difficult, I am glad it set me on the path it did, and I am excited to see where it brings me going forward.