5 minute read

Two Tales of Perseverance

Martinez looks at old drawings that their nephews sent to them in prison.

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Right: Martinez joined CSUN’s Project Rebound as a member when it was established in 2020. The organization gave them the tools to be able to transition to a professional environment. Without these lifelines and the mentors along the way, Martinez admits they wouldn’t be here today.

A er landing the position at Disney, their stepmother handed down this childhood pendant to Martinez.

Martinez collected a photo album of pictures and mementos while in prison. Martinez said they developed sisterly bonds with the women they met in Folsom.

Right: Martinez opens up about their own personal story in hopes of connecting with other women that have struggled with the guilt of having abortion. “I thought I wasn’t going to feel anything,” Martinez said. “But the guilt was there.” They said talking about it doesn’t take the pain away completely, but it’s a way to ease the emotions.

Bottom right hand corner: Martinez has achieved many accomplishments while at CSUN, but says they could not have done it without the help of their sisters and academic mentors.

One of Martinez’s goals is to persuade their supervisor at Disney to formally establish intern opportunities for recently paroled individuals to join Disney’s Professional Internship Program.

The journey toward graduation and feeling grateful for the challenge

An unlikely duo, but also the perfect team is found among them. It is a Monday afternoon in a small back office of Jerome Richfield Hall, where Isaac Michael Ybarra and Stephanie Barboza are planning out the remainder of their last semester as president and vice president of the American Indian Student Association.

Although they walked different paths, they share a link: the desire to serve their Native communities and in turn, better themselves.

Ybarra and Barboza are no strangers to facing challenges in pursuit of their education, with each having their fair share of roadblocks.

For Ybarra, a film major, higher education ran in the family, so to speak, and he considered himself a legacy student. His father, stepmother, grandmother and aunt all attended and graduated from CSUN.

“I was encouraged to not quit and just follow through with my schooling,” Ybarra said. “There’s a lot of experiences and opportunities that I would not have been able to grasp if I wasn’t in school.”

During his time at CSUN, one of the opportunities and challenges Ybarra faced was studying abroad in Italy. He was originally scheduled to stay a full three semesters, but was sent back to the U.S. when the pandemic broke out.

“I was a little disorganized and unprepared,” Ybarra said. “I did not want to take a semester off, so I just decided to take an extra semester of electives.”

In addition to having his education abroad interrupted, Ybarra also had a brush with danger when he was involved in a serious car accident.

“My life flashed before my eyes and it made me look at things differently,” Ybarra said. “I realized wow, I just survived something and there is a meaning to life, I need to do something big.”

It was after his accident that Ybarra decided to get more involved with his community and

become an active member of AISA at CSUN. Similarly to Ybarra’s story, Barboza has had her fair share of close calls and life-altering events. The Chicano/a studies major who is also minoring in American Indian Studies, shared that her educational journey was not the easiest, but that she feels grateful. “I think at least once a year I was in emergency housing,” Barboza said. “That is something a lot of students face and people don’t talk “A lot of it was about it a lot. I think that is why I took on leadership learning how to positions at CSUN to advocate for more resources deeply heal and and help.” Barboza also shared that she had dealt with several deal with things health issues due to the stress she was facing over in a healthy way.” classes, housing and her mental health. “A lot of it was learning -Stephanie Barboza how to deeply heal and deal with things in a healthy way,” AISA Vice President Barboza said. “I just needed someone to talk to and help. That’s why it was so nice to find the Chicano house and the AISA house where we would do healing circles.” Besides the barriers that would dissuade others from continuing their education, both Ybarra and Barboza have stated that they feel grateful for the chance to grow and for what the future holds.

Stephanie Barboza in the garden at the AISA house at CSUN in Northridge, Calif., on April 18, 2022.

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