Prague 2018

During the early weeks of June I was able to visit Prague, the capital of the Czech Republic. Everyday that I spent in Prague was memorable and one of the most enjoyable times that I have spent with my family. The city was absolutely beautiful. We walked across the town and explored something new everyday. My favorite parts of Prague were the castle and Charles Bridge. At both of these attractions I was able to overlook the amazing city, and I noticed how unique the rooftops were, and how bright every building was. Prague was like no other place I have ever visited. Everything I saw seemed to be ancient and untouched for hundreds of years, something I found to be especially unique. I hope to return one day and visit more of Europe to learn about its deep history.

College Road Trip 2018

My dad and I went on our second college road trip at the end of April and early May. We visited Princeton University (I had been there for the Princeton Prize), Columbia University, NYU, Harvard, and Brown University.

I Am Not An Immigrant

My mother came to the United States from Guanajuato as a teenager but she is not an immigrant. Generations of family before her also came to the North but that does not make us a family of immigrants.

By the color of my skin and the languages I speak you may think I am an immigrant, but how can that be if I am on the land of my ancestors.

If it weren’t for war and American greed where we stand would still be Mexico. This also applies to Nevada, Utah, Arizona, Nuevo Mexico, Texas, Oklahoma, Kansas, and Wyoming.  California to me is a part of Aztlan, the point of origin of the Mexica people, therefore it is my home.

You know that feeling of being home, one that cannot be replicated anywhere else. It’s a feeling of tranquility and safety. You feel comfortable with your surroundings and as if all the lights were suddenly turned off and it was pitch black, you still would be able to navigate your surroundings because you know where everything is. Most importantly about your home, you feel loved. You feel like you can be vulnerable. You feel like you can cry without being subjected to criticism or like you can laugh and trust someone else to always join right in with you. For a lot of us this feeling of being at home isn’t found in the literal physical structure of a house. But no matter who you are, it is like human instinct to find this sense of belonging.

To me, home is anywhere between the coast and mountains of California. This is where I can breathe in the ocean air most familiar to me and fill my lungs with memories. Memories of scaling cliffs made of jade with my cousin in Big Sur as the ocean waves angrily crashed below us. Memories of taking naps on the beach and no need to cover up because, as my grandma says, el sol es la cobija de los pobres, the sun is the blanket of the poor. This is somewhat dramatic, but it is true. If I am ever feeling cold, I can step outside and count on the sun to comfort me and not burn me, something unique to California.

I find love here like nowhere else. I find people who switch between Spanish and English in the same sentence just like me. I find people I could listen to talk for hours and I would never get bored or annoyed because I love them that much. I find people who love their family and community to the extent that they are willing to defend it by any means necessary just like me.

Since the 1800s California has been the land of my ancestors, and I can feel that to my very core. Chicano, Chicana, Mexicano, or Mexicana, much of what is the United States was and forever will be our rightful home, no matter who tells us otherwise.

I recognize that in my lifetime California will not return to its people but because of this I will do whatever I can to someday be recognized as a native. Because I believe I am not an immigrant.

A Little More About Me

My full name is Luz Victoria Simón Jasso. When I say my name out loud people, more often than not, try to find ways to change it.

Can I call you Lucy?

Luz means light, right?

Can I call you light?

Victoria is a pretty name.

These are the most common responses I hear. I don’t take offense to these comments as often as I used to, I instead try to respond with the reason why I am named Luz Victoria.

My grandmother on my mother’s side is named Luz and on my father’s side my grandmother is named Victoria. Together their names make my first name. My last names are my mother’s and father’s. When I was born, my parents made sure that my name included both sides of the family because of the love and respect they have for their parents.

For a while now I have understood that the most important thing to me is my family. There has not been a moment when I was in need of support and my family was not there to provide me with what I needed. Even when we bicker, and I swear I am eager as ever to leave San Diego to go to college, I know deep down that I will not find the same type of unconditional love that I have at home.

Along with the pride I have for my name, I have the equal of that pride for my heritage. I am a Chicana that was raised in Logan Heights, and three years ago moved to Nestor – a small community between San Ysidro and Imperial Beach in the South Bay of San Diego. To me, being a Chicana  means having been born in the United States and visiting Mexico to be with the rest of my family. It also means having pride in my history, and solidarity with sisters and brothers of other cultures and backgrounds. Chicanismo is always feeling at home in California, where I remember that Aztlan was the pre-Hispanic place of origin of the Aztec people, and that San Diego is the place of origin of the Kumeyaay people.

As you may be able to tell, my immediate family has many principles that have been passed on to me, one of them being the importance of education. The lessons I enjoy covering and discussing most in the classroom involve History and the Social Sciences. I have found that my strengths involve problem solving, written reflection, and public speaking. I sometimes struggle with mathematics, but I have found ways to work on this material to get better at it with extra effort.

This year I am most excited about what projects will be presented to me as part of the HTHCV project based learning curriculum. When it comes to projects, I don’t have to be passionate about the topic in order to try my best – they just have to be relevant to the world we live in. I am especially excited to work on it with my peers and challenge myself in new ways.