The Dream

Ever since I was five years old, I have watched the Scripps National Spelling Bee. The spelling bee appealed to me because it showcased one's academic talents on a national stage. During my time in elementary school I always wondered, "That could be me competing onstage and having the time of my life in Washington, D.C., but what does it take to live my own dream?" In 2011, my brother, Mark, qualified for Nationals and it was on the car ride back from the regional bee that I realized that this could be me one day.

Regionals

I competed at my school spelling bee in El Paso and won for my first spelling bee. I'm 11 and made it to the regional spelling bee. I was stumped on the 1st round with the word isobar and was eliminated. But I still have 3 years to compete so watch out D.C. I'm gonna make it to you one way or ANOTHER!

Greek and Latin in the ER

"The patient has had a bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy." I ponder the various Greek roots in my head. "Salpinx" means Fallopian tubes, “oophor” means ovary, and "ectomy" means removal. Without even googling this word, I know that this person has had both sets of Fallopian tubes and ovaries removed. As an emergency department scribe, I encounter many words derived from Greek and Latin roots, and I expect to see more as I enter a career in medicine.

A Confidence Boost from the Bee

In 1982, I was the spelling champion of Saginaw County, Michigan. Participating in the National Spelling Bee provided me with an invaluable early lesson in how to study a large amount of complex material in a short amount of time and, just as importantly, it taught me that hard work and focused attention can indeed pay off. I was always the type of kid who did much better at contests and standardized tests than I did in school, and being able to participate in the National Spelling Bee gave me a boost of confidence at a time in my life when I really needed that.

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