The Most Significant Life Event “Be strong, banish fear and doubt, and remember the lord is with you wherever you go” (Joshua 1:9 New International Version). Next month on September 28th, will be my 30th birthday, another milestone will be met. As I look forward to celebrate this milestone, I have also taken the time to reflect on who I am today. Throughout the years, I have experienced many obstacles that have influenced me into becoming the person I am currently. Moving to Columbia, South Carolina had great, if not the greatest, influence on me. Summer of 2004, recent high school graduate from Easley High, which is located in a small upstate town of South Carolina. As any teenager that just graduated, I was ready to be miss independent. Well miss independent, me, had already discuss plans with my divorce parents on staying in the small town, and attending technical college. At this time, technical college was the quickest way to achieve getting a nursing degree. Therefore, I didn’t spend time filling out college applications during my senior year of high school, instead I chose to bounce back and forth between mom’s house …show more content…
Moving to Columbia, open up so many opportunities for me to actually take time and explores who I want to be. Each day I strive to be a better person, a person that will leave a positive mark on each individual I meet. Now almost 11 years later, I graduated with my associate degree in science and received my certification in surgical technologist. Work at a local hospital as a certified surgical tech, and in the process of completing my Bachelor of Science in Nursing. Along with becoming success in a career I enjoy, I also was able to meet the love of life. We were married last year and currently own a house in Columbia. It is safe to say that moving to Columbia gave me many more opportunities to become the woman I am
Throughout our lives, we make choices and decisions that change our lives and others in positive and/or negative ways. It is these decisions that determine how we will be remembered, our legacy. When I graduate high school, I want to be remembered by the qualities that define me as a person and the good I’ve done for others. Throughout the years, I’ve been often been described by my family and friends as bold, confident, outgoing, and hardworking. Not only are these characteristics important to me, but they are important to my family, as they want to leave a legacy in the name of our family. The qualities I have exhibited are the same qualities past family members have shown and are remembered for. Through always putting out my best effort when it comes to work and school, I have shown my dedication and discipline. Through doing what I can to help others, I have displayed my commitment to world peace, the betterment of the world as a whole, and the yearning to make a difference in someone’s life other than my
2.1 Evaluate the effectiveness of organizational policies and procedures in supporting individuals and their social networks affected by significant life events
Of all of the people I have encountered in my life so far, my father is the one to leave the greatest impact. I remember my dad would always ask me “ do you want to be the boss or be bossed? ” These word are what drives me to work hard and try my best in everything that I do. Maybe it was the fact that I have seen him grow so much over the years that his words and actions have affected me so much today. Through these words and actions I have been able to think of what i want to do and where I want to be in life after I graduate high school.
Breathing heavily, a million things run through my mind. I’m dying. I can’t feel my feet. My lungs aren’t taking in oxygen fast enough. However, the finish line and the satisfaction of knowing that I had gotten myself through three miles loom ahead. Clenching my fists, I force myself through the indoor track at JCC. The excitement and pride that I feel when I finally achieve my goal is indescribable.
Since I was in the 10th grade, I knew I wanted to pursue my education at Mount Vernon Nazarene University for nursing. Furthermore, my first college visit on MVNYOU day confirmed my decision. I greatly treasure the close knit community and the Christian based morals. To get a head start on my journey, my sophomore year I applied and was accepted into the Career and Technology Education Center of Licking County for Clinical Care (C-TEC), a nursing based program. In the duration of my last two years of high school, instead of simply graduating with my diploma, I graduated with my STNA, CET, CPT, CPCT, and my CPhT. I have gained a knowledge of the basic fundamentals of nursing. I am an active member of many different clubs and organizations supporting
So in October of 2014, I made a decision that I wanted more out of life and decided to move to Columbia, S.C. It has been an adventure and decided I could not have been more proud of. I am a country girl from a small town of Newberry County with country fields, historical buildings, apartment complex, and the joys of knowing everyone in the town. I have always wanted to get out of the small town and have desired to see and experience what else life had to offer in another city, even though it is only thirty to forty-five minutes from my hometown, I consider it a new beginning and start in my success of life.
Beyond discovering my direction for my life through the adoption of my brother, I found the country where I want to live out my mission. This summer I will have the opportunity of visiting my hopefully future home for the fourth time to help those with physical and spiritual needs, continue to build friendships with the Hondurans, and teach art to school-aged children.
I would say that one of the biggest things in my life right now is basketball. I’m not the greatest at it, but compared to last year I am a lot better than I was. It’s been a lot of time and work put into this and I am glad to say I am a basketball player for the school of East Wake Academy. I have been one of the biggest players in the school program.
Honestly, I never thought I would be a nurse. More so, I never thought I would have a college degree, as no one in my family had even attempted college before. I shared my desire to attend college with my high school English teacher, and with her guidance I applied for scholarships and received three upon graduating along with financial aid, which was important due to my family’s economic situation. As my college graduation neared, my dreams of applying to medical school were put on hold when my sister left her two small children in my care while she struggled to find work. My family was my priority, and I could not bare the thought of abandoning them in their time of need, even if it meant putting my future on hold. I decided to pursue a bachelor’s degree of Nursing at UTMB so I could stay close to home. Nursing seemed like the most obvious career choice to get first-hand experience and patient interaction in the medical field. Shortly after starting the nursing program, my father was diagnosed
I believe the turning point of my life began with the separation of my parents. I had always imagined myself living in my native homeland of the Dominican Republic. Yet, my life would drastically change as a consequence of my parents divorce. A few weeks after my parent’s divorce, my mother and I arrived undocumented in Boston, Massachusetts. Thus, at the age of fourteen, I found myself in a new country with few family and friends. The following chapter of my life would require me to not only make sacrifices but also become more independent. The meaning and value for me becoming independent at a young age was twofold: (1) I was able to help my mother financially and (2) I learned the meaning of hard work and perseverance. I recognize that my tangible core values cannot be measured by test scores—though I have done well academically—but by my desire and perseverance to become a successful Latina.
In the novel life lessons:two experts on death and dying teach us the mysteries of life and living. The novel talks about many lessons such as
I grew up in one of the wealthiest families in Minnesota and I was constantly reminded by the many family get togethers that were held at one of my uncle’s houses. You see, in my family the term wealth does not have the same definition as that of the one in the dictionary. Instead of riches and an abundance of money, I was born into a massive and united family that has supported each other throughout each others lives’. In truth, my family has been through extremely tough times financially, especially so in this last year with the loss of our main source of income, my mother’s job. With a roofing, seasonal working father and a year full of rain, there wasn’t much money to be spared for anything other than the essentials and even then those
As I look back in the past, I could not be happier with the decision of moving because I wouldn't have the great group of friends I have now. I also couldn't think my parents, family, friends, and church members who influenced me for the seventeen years of my life. They gave me the encouragement to continue to work hard even if life got rough. I couldn't be happier to start college next Fall and see what great things are going to happen in my
As I sit on my bed weakened and dying I want to say that I despair the fall. I have hated this miserable time of the year ever since I was growing up. It reminded me of death and I would have never thought it would actually bring me to the end of my life. I will recount what happened,but I want to re-emphasize that no matter if I go to heaven or hell, I hope to God that I will not see those leaves falling off the town’s beautiful trees, the snow endlessly falling, and the dread of loneliness that this season brings.
As a result, I graduated high school as a Nurse Aide. As the daughter of an absentee alcoholic father, I was the product of an impoverished single-parent, yet loving, household. Odds, for a post-secondary education, were seemingly stacked against me, and temporarily precluded my pursuit to become a nurse. Shortly after graduation, I was married and obtained a job as a phlebotomist. Instead of pursuing my dream, I became a young mother, and due to an inability to afford childcare, was dependent upon public assistance. When our daughters began kindergarten, I went to work part-time as a Paramedical Insurance Examiner and later, challenged the registry exam for Medical Assisting, scoring in the 99th percentile. Seeing my enthusiasm, and valuing my potential, my employer suggested that I return to school for Nursing. He graciously assisted me in procuring financial aid. Subsequently, I graduated with High Honors from Alamance Community College, earning an Associate of Applied Science in Nursing (ADN). As a first-generation college graduate, I finally felt the cycle had been