Their Dreams on Hold

One of my assignments for 2026 is to teach an English 1A/1B course at the high school level via Hartnell Community College’s Dual Enrollment Program. I’ve taught these college courses several times, and as always, it’s a  pleasure to be in the presence of such young, vibrant students. They are all seniors, and they will get college credit for completing the year-long course. I thoroughly enjoy being around them, as their energy and lust for life is infectious, and the excitement they hold for their futures is beautiful to witness. A great deal of their excitement comes from their dreams of attending a university and getting into their dream schools! My classroom pulsates when they talk of universities, their majors, the application process, financial aid, housing, and everything else connected to attending college. Their exhilaration is compounded by the fact that they are fully aware that they are on the verge of graduating from high school, on the verge of experiencing and completing one of our most beautiful rites of passage. They are ready to get out! On a personal level, I feel fortunate to be in such close proximity to their exuberance and innocence. The energy they emit makes me feel alive, and thanks to these students, I am a much happier teacher this school year. 

There is a little fear in the air, too. They worry about not getting into their top choice school. They worry about money and housing, too. But youth always wins out, and many of these kids, the brave ones, will ignore the fear and march towards the life they are destined to live.  

Because this is 2026, there is a much greater fear to deal with, one that is not so forgiving.I learned about this when we returned from the Christmas Break when I overheard two of my students discussing college and their dream schools. What I heard caused me to pause, to the point where I literally froze in front of the two girls. What I was hearing was a revelation that simply did not exist in my mind, and the weight of it left me stunned. 

Unfortunately, not everything is as it seems. The other day, I was somewhat stunned by something I learned about them. It caused me to pause, to the point where I literally froze in front of them. What I was hearing was a revelation that simply did not exist in my mind, and I’m sure that for others, this, too, is a revelation.   

Our country’s current administration is causing high school seniors to reevaluate their dreams. For many, the once carefree dream of applying to UCLA or San Diego State is no longer an option. Now, students are purposely avoiding applying to certain colleges for fear of deportation. They are not fearing their own deportation. They are citizens. They are fearing the deportation of their mothers and fathers, of their grandmothers and grandfathers. One of my students said, “I wanted to apply to San Diego State and UC San Diego, but I can’t risk my parents driving down there to visit me. They wouldn’t even be able to see me graduate.” Another student added, “Oh, yeah! Me, too! I didn’t apply to UCLA or San Diego schools. There’s no way they would be able to visit me. It’s not worth it.” 

I can’t remember ever hearing this from any student, and I’ve been teaching for nearly thirty years. It is sad to hear, too. Imagine having to cancel a dream out of real, tangible fear. “Two or three years ago, it wasn’t a thing. The thought was that it’s going to happen. We are going to Chicago or New York!” said one of my students. She added, “You didn’t think that there was going to be a barrier.” My jaw dropped on hearing them talk about ICE and deportation in the same breath as universities and dream schools. 

The ramifications of a parent getting deported run very deep. Parents are the lifelines for their kids. They support them in ways that only parents know. From the clothes on their backs to the food on their plates, and the plates themselves, students rely heavily on the support of their parents. “I rely on my parents to pay for my schooling and to drive me to school. But the risk is not worth it. It’s worth it to sacrifice my dreams if it means my parents are going to be with me,” said one of my female students. Another student shared bits of a conversation she had with her father around this topic. She said, “My dad told me to do what I want and that what’s going on now with ICE shouldn’t stop me, but I wouldn’t be able to deal with the guilt if something happened. It’s not worth it.” 

Things seem dire for these students, and the issue has even caused some students to envy the ones that don’t have to deal with this fear. “I feel like kids whose parents are first and second generation Mexican-Americans are lucky because they don’t really have to deal with this problem because they at least have documentation that they are citizens. Yeah, they could still get taken in, but at least they have something to carry with them,” said one student.

I’m not sure exactly why, other than this being a generally depressing thing, but hearing about it from their own mouths has really affected my psyche, and it causes me pain each time I think about it. I feel stupid, too! How could I have not thought about this before? How could I have not seen this coming? I suppose I exist in a bubble where an issue like this never crossed my mind, not even in the remotest corner. But for my students, this fear exists in the most real way. The biggest pain for me, the saddest part of all of this, is having to listen to my students purposely give up their dreams for the greater good of their families. And they say with courage! It’s a very brave thing to do, but it’s also a very loving thing to do. This act serves to show us the importance of family and the strength of these bonds in the face of serious, life-altering adversity. For me, I hope my students can one way or another make their dreams come true. All they need is a chance. 

My Writing Students: Their Chronicles

I currently have both the honor and privilege of teaching a community college English 1A course. However, this class is slightly different than the others I’ve taught, as my current students are high school seniors, dual-enrolled in the course while they are still seniors at Alisal High School. I am a full-time teacher at Alisal High School, and I teach the course from my Alisal High School classroom instead of a Hartnell College classroom. I’ve been an adjunct English professor at Hartnell College for several years, and I have always thoroughly enjoyed working with this demographic. For context, my everyday course load at the high school is comprised of sophomores, some defiant, some affected by COVID, and some simply disinterested in school. The personalities and energy and intelligence of my English 1A students charge my battery and help me get off to a great start to the day.

We do a significant amount of writing on a variety of topics. Their writing is incredible. I’ve always said that students at Alisal High School are sitting on winning lottery tickets. If they could only write their stories, they would be rich! But this is another more complex topic for a later time. Their stories are good–very good! The following is an essay written by one of my students from my English 1A course. Her name is omitted, but you can refer to her as “Destino.”

My Destiny

Growing up, I faced challenges that forced me to grow up quickly, long before I should have. Losing my dad emotionally and trying to hold on to my mom while she drifted away left me feeling alone, confused, and responsible for things no child should carry. But living through these experiences taught me strength, independence, and the importance of knowing my own worth. In addition to learning these particular traits, I also learned resiliency, emotional maturity, and the strength to speak up and advocate for myself when I needed help.  

I learned very early what it felt like to be surrounded by love, but it was a love that didn’t always feel like love. When my parents split up, everything in my life changed. My dad, who I was once super close to, slowly started slipping away. I would find myself waiting for him, before school, after school, at award ceremonies, and even just sitting on the stairs hoping he would show up to spend time with me. I tried to be understanding every time he called to say something came up, but eventually I stopped feeling disappointed and just accepted his excuses as normal. When we did spend time together, it was rarely just us. He often brought different girls around, and even after telling him how much it hurt me, things didn’t change. He promised me he’d do better, but a few weeks later, he would be in a new relationship.  At one point, I found out his girlfriend was pregnant from someone else, and after the baby was born, nothing changed. 

We never spent time alone. I missed him, and even though it felt selfish, I really wanted him to choose me the way a dad should choose his daughter. When I told him how I felt, he told me he didn’t have time for me anymore and needed to focus on his new family. He thanked me for teaching him how to be a dad, and after that conversation, we never spoke again. It felt like losing him twice, once when he left my mom, and again when he left me.

After losing my dad, I turned to my mom, whom I desperately needed. However, my mom depended on me for everything, but not in the way moms usually lean on their kids. She expected me to take care of her emotions and her needs, even when I was barely understanding my own. After the split, she changed in ways she never noticed, but I definitely did. I tried so hard to understand what she was going through: losing a partner, adjusting to a new life, but she never realized that I was going through the same thing. She was rarely home because she was out our partying. I would stay up to open the door for her late at night, and she forced me to sleep in her bed, asking for affection whenever she needed comfort. What she didn’t see was that she was filling her emptiness and at the same time adding to mine. I was too young to be around so many adults, too young to be the one she leaned on, and too young to stay awake worrying about when she’d be home.

When she started a new relationship with a man in prison, everything changed, again. At first, I believed her when she told me how things would get better when he got out, but as the years passed, he never left prison. She only grew more distant. She spent hours on FaceTime with him, even when she had promised we’d watch a movie together. I started joining her on prison visits, not because I liked it, but because it was the only time she paid attention to me. During an argument, she told me that if I ever ruined her relationship, I could forget I ever had a mom. Days later, I found out she married him in prison behind my back. I realized her world revolved around whatever made her feel wanted or distracted, even if it meant forgetting about me.

In June 2023, things reached my  breaking point. In many traditional households, hitting children is brushed off as “normal,” but after this I understood this to a certain extent. My mom had always been verbally abusive, but she was physical too, slapping me, pulling my hair, and even punching me. As I got older, it didn’t stop.  It only escalated. She even started hitting me in front of people. Then, one night around three in the morning, there was another change. We got into an argument while lying in bed, and it escalated fast. She hit me so hard it drew blood and caused my vision to go black. I had never bled from one of her hits before. When I came back to my senses, I got up, and yelled “You made me bleed!” I saw blood covering my hands, the bed, and the floor. I ran to the restroom, and  I waited for her to check on me, but she never did. Instead, she remained on the phone. I cried myself to sleep that night, hoping she’d apologize in the morning. She didn’t. She was in another room talking to her husband. That was when something in me finally snapped. I realized no apology would ever come. I quietly ran downstairs, called my aunt, and asked her to pick me up. When my mom agreed to let me leave, I ran out the door before she could change her mind. For the next few weeks, I moved between relatives’ homes until CPS got involved.

Like anyone who leaves a painful home, I faced new challenges afterward. CPS decided to place me with my dad, even though I hadn’t seen him in years. It was insanely hard. I wasn’t treated any better. I had to watch my dad be a dad to someone else while barely acknowledging me, and I was kept away from the rest of my family. I hit a breaking point. I tried to explain to him that I needed to be with my uncles, where I felt safe, but after speaking to my mom, he changed his mind. In all honesty, I went  emotionally crazy. My dad called 911, and I was taken to a hospital and then transferred to a mental health facility for teens. I didn’t belong there. I wasn’t going to do anything to myself or anyone else. I just needed peace and a place where people cared about me. I did everything I needed to do to be released: I followed every rule, ate what they asked me to, and cooperated with every test. After nine nights, I was allowed to leave. When I was out, my mom allowed me to remain with my uncle under certain conditions, but none of that mattered to me because I finally felt safe. I started my sophomore year a week later. Even though people doubted me, I finished the year with straight A’s, something I’m proud of after everything I had been through. I worked hard, asked my teachers for help, stayed in classes during lunch to get additional help, attended Saturday school tutor, and went to tutorials at least once a week. 

For years, I felt trapped, stuck in a life that was shaped by fear, manipulation, and the belief that I wasn’t enough. But now, I am finally stepping into a life where I get to choose who I become. My experiences were painful, but they shaped me. They are my destiny, and I would never erase them, because they made me strong, independent, and determined. They taught me how to protect myself, how to recognize real love, and how to keep moving forward even when everything feels impossible. Most importantly, they showed me that I deserve a better life than the life I was born into, and that I am capable of having the courage to create a future completely different from my past, because I am more than just a kid with daddy and mommy issues. I am a kid who survived all of these challenges and one who knows how to be resilient, mature, and strong.