Aspiring Docs Diaries

Chase Your Dreams

“Today stop and take a look at you. Be proud of all that you do and all that you are” – Heather Stillufsen

I don’t have successful doctor parents like many of my pre-med peers. I grew up underprivileged. My parents gave me what they could and I was always grateful. I didn’t know what I was missing. We lived in a lower-middle-class neighborhood, I went to the public school and I didn’t get a good education. In my town, no one spoke of college or what you wanted to be when you grew up because nothing great was expected of us. In my home no one ever said you could grow up to do great things. The norm was that we did not speak about school and no one kept up with my grades. No one took an interest in my education, so I didn’t care about my education either. How I regret that now. I think it would have made such a difference in my life.

Disaster struck my family when I was in the fifth grade. My father was incarcerated for a crime he committed while under the influence of drugs. He had struggled with substance abuse all his life, and unfortunately through most of my childhood. My mother worked very hard and struggled to keep us afloat but the stress became too much. She stopped going to work and began suffering with mental health issues. Two years later, child protective services intervened. Unfortunately my sister and I were not able to stay together. I was sent to live with my older sister and her husband.

Needless to say I found it very hard to cope without my parents and I was a mess during my middle school years. My teachers and the school counselor worried I would be pregnant or worse by the time I reached the end of 8th grade. I struggled to process and accept everything that I was going through. Now that I’m older, I realize that my mother was sick and wasn’t able to cope. While I wish things could have been different, today I realize that this painful part of my life has led me to the person I’ve become. I appreciate things more and I learned how to forgive. I think it will help me to be a better informed and more compassionate doctor in the future.

When I entered high School, I kept making one bad decision after another. Somehow my sister’s husband seemed to believe in me. He saw a better future for me, telling me that I could do better. But I wasn’t ready to change. I had decided it was easier not trying because I didn’t believe I could do better. I couldn’t understand why he was wasting his time on me. In the end, I dropped out of school and floated through life for a while.

Then I turned 18, and I wanted to work but I found that I couldn’t find a job. So I took the first step and got my GED. I started working a dead end job and hated every second of every day I was there. But it propelled me to sign up for classes at my local community college. “What is your major of focus?” the advisor asked, since they had to put something down. I was stumped. Although I’d never deeply thought about it, I put pre-med, because why not? I’d always admired doctors as if they were saints or angels. To me they are the modern day heroes.

Time passed while I took two classes at a time, only earning average grades. I thought to myself, what am I doing? I’ll never finish college never mind get into medical school. I didn’t have a single drop of belief or confidence in myself so I looked for a more attainable goal. This led me to get my CNA (certified nursing assistant). I breezed through the course, quit my dead-end job and started working at a nursing home. What an awakening that was for me! I loved my job and my coworkers; it was a transformative experience. My nurse friends encouraged me to go further in nursing, so I did. I started taking pre-requisite classes and I found that I had a love for science. Who would have thought I’d be good at science? I left the job at the nursing home to work at a hospital and there I started working with my heroes: doctors. I watched them walking tall and proud, almost imagining them in moving down the hallway in slow motion. But, still, I didn’t pursue my dream of becoming a doctor… though now my desire to become a physician was crystal clear.

I kept working and moving forward. I continued to complete the prerequisites to become a registered nurse. And I took an even bigger step: I told my family. For the first time I could tell that they were proud of me. But when I was a semester away from applying to nursing school, instead of happiness I felt empty and scared. I felt I couldn’t confide in anyone that what I really wanted was to become a doctor. I felt ashamed and fearful that I would be put down like I felt I had been in the past. But, if I didn’t try to become a doctor I felt it would always haunt me I felt compelled, like breathing. Your body knows you have to breathe; it doesn’t give you a choice. It compels you. That is how I felt about becoming a doctor.

I realized I needed to take the leap regardless of my fears and insecurities. So I went and formally changed my degree plan and then told my boyfriend. He supported me and he told me that he believed in me. Next, I told my family and I was pleasantly surprised to see them so happy for me. My mother said she didn’t understand why I wanted to be in school for so long, trying to achieve something so big, in what she perceives to be a male-dominated profession. She thought I could start making money faster in a different field. But as time has gone by, she’s seen me demonstrate my drive and passion to move forward and pursue this career, and she’s come to support me, too.

I started my first semester at my new university with a bang. I didn’t know I had it in me. I mostly excelled in my courses. When I struggled at times, I haven’t quit. I keep going. I’ve met great people with the same goal and feel in my zone around them and in my classes. I’m even considered “the smart one” in my groups. It’s filled me with happiness because I never thought I would get here. But it’s really my beginning, because I know I have so much more to go through. Soon I’ll be taking the MCAT and preparing to start filling out medical school applications. It’s been a long road, but I haven’t felt that I’ve made the wrong decision, not once.

The point of sharing my story is that no matter who you think you are, where you come from, or how cruel life has been, don’t let that hold you back or tell you can’t do something. You can either become what others expect of you or you can use that as the fuel to push yourself to do better. It’s nice to have support from others, but ultimately your drive needs to come from within you. We are our own biggest support system and we are our biggest enemy. Our self-doubt or self-confidence can be a powerful influence in our decision making, how we react to obstacles, and ultimately what we do in life. You have to believe and feel it in your bones. Believe me, once you wake up that fire inside of you, it’s nearly impossible to put out.

Meet the author:

Stephanie Cantu

Pre-Med

Stephanie Cantu is from El Paso, TX and is a senior at the University of Texas Rio Grande Valley. She is a pre-med biology major with a minor in chemistry. She is the first of her family to attend to a university. She has volunteered for the South Texas Healthcare System and was a student researcher for Texas A&M Agrilife Research Extension in Weslaco. She plans to get more involved in her community by volunteering and shadowing at different facilities to learn more about the health issues affecting her area. She has been doubted if she can succeed, and hopes to prove them wrong as she takes the remainder of her biology courses and continues her journey of becoming a physician.

Comments

  1. Kristi says:

    Stephanie’s story made me cry. I also got my GED and am in my second semester of college. It’s nice to know that everyone was wrong, and that even with a GED you CAN do it.

  2. Arofin olatunji says:

    I am touched. Stephanie’s story really made me want to rethink why I want to study medicine. Our backgrounds are not similar but I still think she is strong and that’s highly commendable. I love the quote “You can either become what others expect of you or you can use that as the fuel to push yourself to do better.”

  3. Benjamin Wolinsky says:

    What an incredible story. Something tells me the new era of doctors will have a very similar story when they are busy practicing medicine and saving lives in the coming years if they aren’t already doing that in one form or another.

  4. Jacqueline says:

    I know that feeling of inner doubt, and the passion of medicine that keeps us all moving forward. I sadly do not have the support of my own family, but I do have the support of my boyfriend and his family. My faith plays such a big part in my drive to help others, and I truly enjoyed your story and I wish the very best for you!

  5. SAsha says:

    Very inspiring we have similar pasts. But the final decision seems to be the same! Im glad Im not the only one! Who is going to be applying to medical school with a shadowy past. This gives me inspiration.

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