Monday, October 12, 2015

Blog 4

The biggest event in my life that has helped me mature into the person I am today was my diagnosis of Juvenile Rheumatoid Arthritis. Not only did this help me as a person but it helped me as a soccer player. It taught me the importance of working hard and fighting through everything and that is in some sense the person I am today. I would not be where I am today in my soccer career if it weren't for Arthritis.

Wednesday, September 30, 2015

Blog 3

Progress for the sake of progress. Not everyone agrees that progress is the same. In order to have progress everyone needs to buy into the same system. This is impossible. Not everyone will be able to buy into the same system. Progress for the sake of progress is not logical as a human. It takes away the idea of free will and says that people should just agree to progress even if they do not believe it is right. Progress is necessary. If as humans we do not have progress then we are going no where.

Thursday, September 24, 2015

Blog 2

Marcus Aurelius must believe that the world is unknown. What we see as the truth is yet to be proven. Everyone has their own perspective on everything, but sometimes we must realize that certain facts are facts. Example: you cannot jump off a 300 foot cliff onto rocks head first and survive. That is clearly a fact. But what he means is that everyone is different. Everyone sees and hears things from a different point of view and processes it individually. Genetically, people are specifically themselves, DNA makes up each human differently. From this we must conclude that opinions and perspectives are all different and what someone sees as a fact or a truth may be an opinion or a perspective for someone else.

Friday, September 18, 2015

Personal statement


294 thousand  out of 72.4 million kids have been diagnosed Juvenile Rheumatoid Arthritis in the United States of America. I am one of the lucky .4 percent. Rheumatoid Arthritis is an autoimmune disease that targets the joints. I was diagnosed with the disease in my upper extremities. Hands, wrists, elbows, and shoulders. I was put on a form of chemotherapy called methotrexate. Chemotherapy, like the medicine cancer patients use. But a very very very low dosage. I still have my hair, the side effects were present but bearable, and it is just a simple injection. Eventually my doctors decided to add a biologic called humira. While risky, the two medicines have been very effective for my body.
I was diagnosed when I was 14 years old. Heading into high school, this was not the way I wanted to start this new chapter in my life. At the time I was playing at the club level for both basketball and soccer. There was nothing I loved more than sports. The thought of my body disabling me from doing what I love made me sick. Coming from a family with small height genetics, my basketball career never seemed too promising. With the knowledge of arthritis in my arms and hands, I had to quit playing basketball. I had been playing basketball for 9 years up to that point and dedicated a lot of time and effort into that sport.
At the time I was a relatively average soccer player on the rise. I never had a great work ethic and relied heavily on my natural talents. While having arthritis, I had to work twice as hard to even stay at the same level as the people around me. While I struggled for a short while this payed off in the long run. With the help from the different medications the inflamation in my joints decreased slowly. About a year after I was diagnosed was right when I made the transition from an average soccer player to an elite soccer player. With the extra work rate I had developed due to the restraints that arthritis has put on me and my natural athletic abilities I was able to thrive as soccer player. That very year I was invited to participate in the olympic development program for the state and for the region. In fact, with the state team, I became a national champion and the top goal scorer in the country. The very next year I signed to play with the Los Angeles Galaxy youth academy program. Becoming the leading scorer for that team as well.
4 years later I am in remission with my arthritis. What I thought would be the definition of my high school life was just the thing allowing me to reach my potential. While it restricted me, made me sick, and just flat out hurt for the most part it allowed me to succeed in ways I never imagined I could and taught me valuable life lessons along the way. As I look back on my high school career, I could not imagine my life without Arthritis.