The Lion's Pride vol. 2 (Jun. 2014) | Page 122

115 For two years I was racking my brain trying to find something else that I could be good at; I was depressed. In my senior year of high school, I took an AP (Advanced Placement) Psychology class. Connecting this with my joy for giving advice and wisdom to friends, I’ve decided that I wanted to be a psychologist—specifically a school counselor. I now feel that being a school counselor is what I’m meant to do in life. Growing up I had difficult experiences battling through depression and the divorce of my parents; I knew that other teens had it worse than me. Every year at my high school, there was at least one case of a student suicide. Some I knew personally, others I never had the pleasure of meeting. I grieve deeply like a mother who lost her child when I recall those names and faces. Couldn’t I have done something? If they were my friend, or if they had opened up about their struggle, would I have been able to talk them out of it? Such feelings explain why I want to be a school counselor. Not every teenager or child has the confidence to ask their parents to see a professional therapist—in fact, I highly doubt most depressed people would have the mindset to seek out help. I want to be accessible for any troubled teen that has a voice.