UHCL student graduates with diploma, transformative life lessons
December 4, 2019 | UHCL Staff
Natalia Marfil Cepeda is receiving her Bachelor of Science in Biological Science from University of Houston-Clear Lake this month, but she learned much more in college
about herself and her future than what was taught in her courses.
“My transition to college from high school was jarring,” she said. “In high school,
I was always in advanced placement classes, but I don’t know if I ever developed study
skills. I sort of cruised by in high school. I wasn’t ready for the shock of going
to class at different times, and that attendance wasn’t mandatory, so I never went.
I had a lot of emotional and personal problems, and it all culminated, so I don’t
think I was really ready for college.”
She started as a creative writing major at another university, but only because she
didn’t think she had the skills to do what she really wanted, which was to study science.
“My friends took AP biology in high school and I didn’t, so I thought I was already
behind and it was too late for me.”
After feeling overwhelmed with life and the pressures of school, Marfil Cepeda took
a semester off college and volunteered in a veterinary clinic. “I got into therapy
and I started taking antidepressants. That helped me gain the confidence to go back
to college and study science,” she said. “I changed colleges and majors. That’s one
important thing I learned — sometimes things feel too late, but only because other
people tell you that by this age, you should have done certain things. But that’s
not the case. You do things when it’s right for you. I learned I am not on someone
else’s timetable.”
Her continued struggles with anxiety and depression issues were very hard, Marfil
Cepeda said. “I wasn’t coping at all. I didn’t want to be ‘one of those people’ who
took antidepressants because there’s a stigma around it. People will say you should
just get over it. But it did help me a lot. Everyone is different. I feel like it
saved my life, because I was at a point where I didn’t eat, I didn’t go to class,
and I didn’t want to exist.”
While at UH-Clear Lake, Marfil Cepeda took advantage of Counseling Services. “They’re really good, and I needed to remind myself that self-care is important,”
she said. “I was busy with class and extra-curricular activities, but I needed to
schedule those appointments because things build up. It’s good to release everything.
And I also learned that my anxiety and depression will never leave me, but I can be
OK with that. With medication and therapy, it’s less of a weight and more like a balloon
that’s always tied to me, but not weighing me down.”
She added that as she became more active in classes and student organizations, she
had to make sure she took care of herself. “I think sometimes I made myself be busy
because I was going through so much,” she said. “I asked myself, am I really OK or
am I just so busy I don’t notice if I’m OK?”
When she began her first semester at UHCL, she still wasn’t sure she had chosen the
right path. “I was in my first biology class and the professor said the upcoming test
was the hardest of the semester,” she remembered. “I told myself that if I didn’t
do well on the test, then I didn’t belong in this major. I studied really hard, and
then the professor said that one person had received 100 on the test. It was me. And
I learned that even if I didn’t believe in myself, if I worked really hard, I would
get through.”
Additional classes with Assistant Professor of Chemistry Anton Dubrovskiy bolstered Marfil Cepeda’s self-esteem and confidence. “I appreciated that whenever
he saw me, he asked me how I was doing in his class,” she said. “The way he cares
about his students; he doesn’t make them feel like getting grades is the most important
thing. It’s the learning and the experience that counts. Even if I didn’t get straight
A’s, I still was getting skills and learning how to learn.”
As Marfil Cepeda graduates, she plans to apply to veterinary schools to fulfill her
career aspiration of helping living creatures. “When I worked in the veterinary clinic,
I fell in love with the process of helping animals,” she said. “Animals don’t know
how to tell you they’re in pain.”
For other students who are also struggling with similar issues, Marfil Cepeda said
that it might make things easier to cope with if the issues are broken down into tiny
pieces. “Problems can feel very large and scary. But the first step to taking a shower
is to get up and walk to the bathroom. Get out of bed, congratulate yourself. Get
to class, congratulate yourself. These small things will add up,” she said. “Be an
ally to others and to yourself, which can be the hardest thing.”
Find out more about UHCL’s Counseling Services online.
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