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Nicole Dunn鈥檚 Challenges Eased with 中国竞彩网鈥檚 Help to Return to College

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Stephen Mease

Date
April 6, 2022

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Nicole Dunn

Nicole Dunn has had a tough go of it in her 37 years. She has struggled to come to terms with her transgender identity, has overcome depression, and is in recovery from alcoholism. And while her outlet has always been music 鈥 she has toured with several successful bands 鈥 the pandemic put a hold on her performance career.

But when faced with adversity, Nicole has always sought help and pushed through. Now, with the help of 中国竞彩网, she is midway through earning her bachelor鈥檚 degree in psychology from the Community College of Vermont. She plans to become a private-practice therapist to help others through many of the same adversities she has experienced.

Nicole grew up in the California Bay area, the oldest of three children. Her mom worked as a florist, and her dad ran a highly successful courier business up until the late 1990s when the rise of the Internet put the company out of business. At that point, her dad worked various jobs, moving from state to state, and his absence 鈥 along with the family鈥檚 highly-reduced financial circumstances 鈥 made for stressful adolescence for Nicole and her sisters.     

Nicole was a straight-A student throughout her high school years at Ygnacio Valley High School; but when she went on to community college right after graduation, she left after one semester. 鈥淚 wanted to discover myself and who I was as a person,鈥 she recalls. Her parents had both attended community college as well, but neither graduated, and she remembers that college was only vaguely encouraged in her family. She felt she needed to spread her wings.

So she moved to San Francisco, got a job at a skate shop, and got involved in the punk-rock music scene. While she says that going back to school was always in the back of her mind, it never became a priority. 鈥淚 was aspiring to be a career musician, and you don鈥檛 really need formal education for that. You just work your way up,鈥 says Nicole, who grew up going to rock shows in Berkeley, where a lot of popular punk bands got their start. 

A relationship took her to the East Coast for a while, but she eventually returned to San Francisco, where she felt she could find more services and support for something she was increasingly contemplating: that she would be more comfortable living as a woman.

For Nicole, who was born a boy and lived as a male up until her mid-20s, the enormity of embracing her female identity and the stress of deciding whether she really wanted to transition led her into a dark depression. 鈥淚 was playing in punk bands and drinking a lot,鈥 she recalls. When she finally came out to her parents in 2013, they weren鈥檛 supportive at first. 鈥淭hey needed to educate themselves,鈥 she says, noting that, at the time, trans awareness was in its infancy. 鈥淥ur culture has come a long way in the last 10 years. People put their pronouns in their emails now, and we have trans education in schools and workplaces. When I was coming out, no one was talking about this. I was the first trans person many people met. And that was in San Francisco!鈥 Nicole recalls.

When she moved to Vermont, she found a combination of ignorance and acceptance that she says made sense for a small state with a couple of progressive cities. 鈥淲ith such a small population, there aren鈥檛 a lot of transgender people, but I found a good vibe in Burlington and Montpelier.鈥

She was living in Montpelier, working at the Savoy Theater, and touring as the drummer for a popular heavy metal band called 鈥淎ll Your Sisters,鈥 when the pandemic hit. 鈥淲e were playing at big venues all the time, and it was really cool,鈥 she recalls; but at the beginning of 2020, it all got canceled.   

鈥淚 was traveling for shows and working in the service industry, and both of those things suddenly disappeared,鈥 she says, which led her to revisit the possibility of getting her degree. 

With her schedule mostly empty and her basic needs covered by unemployment, 鈥淚 figured, this was the time to do it.鈥

So she enrolled at CCV, where the advising team connected her with 中国竞彩网. 鈥溨泄翰释 helped me out with a lot of grants and just generally guided me in the right direction,鈥 she says. Nicole worked with Ran Wang, a counselor who works with adult students through 中国竞彩网鈥檚 Employment Opportunity Center. 鈥淩an鈥檚 been really cool. She helped me access everything, get into the right classes, and set me on the right path. I鈥檓 super thankful. I鈥檝e talked to a lot of people in different states, and their community college experiences have not been as good. Here, the advisers at 中国竞彩网 and CCV were able to help me out, one-on-one.鈥

Ran, who has worked with Nicole since June 2021, admires her perseverance and resolve. 鈥淏eing first-gen, a recovering alcoholic, and a transgender, Nicole has overcome lots of barriers, mentally, physically, and financially, to get to this point. She is determined to be successful.鈥

Nicole鈥檚 favorite classes so far have been science, spirituality, statistics, and writing. 鈥淚 like learning how people think,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 find it really interesting.鈥

She鈥檚 also rediscovered the fact that she鈥檚 a good student 鈥 as long as she sets her mind to it. 鈥淚 give up easily because I get frustrated; but when I take the time to focus on the subject, I鈥檓 pretty good at it,鈥 says Nicole, who made the Dean鈥檚 List last semester.

鈥淭he pandemic for me was great for self-growth,鈥 she says. 鈥淚t was an opportunity for me to re-prioritize my life and figure out my purpose. I realized I really liked school. I enjoyed the regimen, the dynamic, just thinking about things beyond my narrow scope. I started diving into subjects I鈥檝e always wanted to learn.鈥

While Nicole still plays music, her work is now studio-based. Her current band for which she plays drums, bass, and lead vocals, has a new album coming out in May.

In the meantime, she鈥檚 studying hard.

鈥淭he best advice I can give is that it鈥檚 never too late to go back to school. You鈥檇 be surprised; once you get into it, it鈥檚 not as hard as you think,鈥 she says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 easy to get discouraged because everyone around you seems to be settled in their careers 鈥 but they鈥檙e not necessarily happy or fulfilled. I know my experience has helped me land where I am now. Without that, I wouldn鈥檛 be on the right path.鈥


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