Foresight Paired with ‘Future Sight’ by Svetlana

Svetlana's entry into Varsity Tutor's March 2025 scholarship contest

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Foresight Paired with ‘Future Sight’ by Svetlana - March 2025 Scholarship Essay

Foresight-–something many of us wish we had after a negative incident or experience. We sense that with the proper knowledge, the outcome would’ve been more prudent. In health, the unfortunate truth is that the onset of malaise often strikes people unexpectedly—as what’s likely is the issue had been simmering discreetly on the back burner. As the foundation of my intrigue in healthcare, I often have a ruminating curiosity about what could have been done to prevent sickness. For me, this value of wellbeing has long reverberated in my mind.
I see it this way: without health, you have nothing.
If being bogged down with the common cold is a hindrance, other perilous ailments or chronic conditions pose an even greater menace. Wellbeing weaves through every facet of existence, and its fragility has shaped my perspective onward.
Though I’ve been fortunate to enjoy good physical health for most of my life—apart from minor setbacks like a third-grade adenoidectomy—I’ve come to understand how unsound mental health—which is equally as important as physical wellbeing—can also profoundly impact one’s quality of life. In recent years, I’ve faced psychological issues that reaffirm the importance of both physical and mental wellbeing, for a departure from either can make even daily life feel insurmountable. When malaise triggers dysregulation, that becomes the prevailing state in life; thus, feeling well is something to be cherished. To protect it, to nurture it, to appreciate it is to connect with physical and mental essence. This is a lifelong commitment.
This personal connection of mine drives my pursuit of a career and future in healthcare, particularly in the biological sciences. I aim to unravel the incredible processes that sustain existence—from the cells allowing for the rhythmic beating of the heart, to the molecular intricacies of mitosis—and to understand how disruptions in these processes impact quality of life.
Having a plan for combating threats in our present is a safeguard for the future.
In the next decade, I distinctly see my future in a medical setting—likely a major hospital such as UCHealth University of Colorado Hospital in the local Denver area—working with physicians directly and patients indirectly. As someone in the realm of studying ‘tiny life’, I plan to have earned a Master’s degree with a major in cell biology and a minor in microbiology. I look towards this period in which I work in a diagnostic lab and general research environment. I will provide expertise on lab results, infectious diseases, and treatment options. This behind the scenes role is integral to the interpretation of illnesses and conducting the very experiments needed to bolster our database of bacterial and cellular understanding.
By finishing high school, studying at a university following graduation, and after a few initial jobs to get me on my feet economically, I hope to plant myself into a space where I can plunge forth my curiosity about existence and ultimately propel it into a tangible way of helping my local community. Knowledge has a prospective power to it, equipping oneself with information now in the present sets up future awareness—essentially, this is foresight.
Thus, through upper-education, hands-on experiences, and mentorship, I aspire to gain the knowledge and skills needed to contribute meaningfully to biological sciences. I plan to use my degree to explore the intricate connection between internal processes of the mind and the body’s cells. By doing so, I can work in my field to safeguard the pillars of one’s well being, improving lives and advancing medical understanding for the future.

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