Alsutamates ta’n teli alasutama’tikep weki saq. Kutjamuk lietes, nukates weljimajkewel aq kijelamusi, wejaqama'tes kaskusi aq ikate’s tumawei maqamikew. Tluwe’ wela’lin ukjit mst kowey. Toqojiw nuta’n apoqnmati na kesi pipanimates Uksitkamu aq Kisulkw.
Pray the way we used to pray a long time ago. Go outside, burn sweetgrass and sage, boil cedar, and put tobacco down on the ground. Give gratitude for all things and then, if you need help, you ask Mother Earth and Creator for it.
University has made me more confident. Playing in front of crowds, dancing in front of crowds, talking in front of crowds - this university has helped me to achieve all of that. I tend to be shy, but when I’m doing something I’m very passionate about, I become a very loud person, and this university has helped me to overcome my fear. It’s still there, but I’m working on that.
Read more about Marcel Pefang.
My daughter was born when I was in high school and I've had custody of her since my first year. My first two years at UNB, I was on welfare and I wasn’t really aware of everything that UNB offered. The second I started to reach out, I realized how much I had been missing out on. Financial Aid was there to help me when I was falling behind on daycare expenses and there’s just been overwhelming support from the university’s community that has changed my life. I feel so welcomed, I feel safe at UNB and it's allowed me to focus on my education in a way that I didn’t think I would be able to.
My father had gotten sick when I was in my second year of university and I remember thinking of all the nurses that were caring for him at the time. And it just really sat with me and resonated with me and I thought, ‘That’s what I want to do. I want to be a nurse and make a difference in people’s lives.’
I want to have kids. I want to grow up, be able to retire, be healthy. There still be fishes in the ocean and green grass. No matter how little of an impact I have, I do still have an impact. The fact that I can influence others with the choices I make inspires me to be better.
Being a healthcare professional in this time is unprecedented. It is up to each and every one of us to do our part: practice physical distancing, wash your hands and, please, STAY HOME. I'm so very fortunate to fight beside my coworkers and brave the unknown. They are some of the smartest and bravest people you'll ever meet: the other doctors, nurses, PAs, NPs, RTs, paramedics, clerks, janitors, lab staff, pharmacists and everyone else coming to the hospital to work. They say, 'look for the helpers.' Well, I'm surrounded by them. And I'm so proud.
When I applied to medical school and didn’t get in, I really felt like a failure. Like everything had crumbled. And now looking back, that’s probably one of the best things that ever happened to me because I had to think, ‘OK, what am I going to do next year if I’m not going to medical school?’ And that’s the reason I found research. I don’t even think about going to medical school anymore because I’m doing exactly what I love and I just know so much that virus research is exactly where I’m supposed to be.
Read more about Hannah Wallace.
If somebody tells you you can’t do something, don’t listen to them. I couldn't tell you the number of times I’ve been told I can’t do something and I’ve said, ‘watch me.’ It started when I played football in Grade 9 and they told me there was no Girls' team, so I said ‘I’m going to play for the Boys' team then.’ And anytime somebody has told me I couldn’t do something because I was a girl, I was like, ‘watch me do it.’ And it’s that sense of seeing it as a challenge rather than a threat and rising to the opportunity. Because I think those are actually beautiful opportunities to show people not just what you’re capable of, but what women are capable of.
I had no idea what I wanted to do with my life. But reconnecting with my indigeneity, this part of myself that I didn’t really know before, has not only given me a clearer path, but also a purpose. It’s that whole spiritual piece of connecting you to something bigger than just yourself. The cultural disconnection I experienced is a consequence of colonialism. But knowing this motivates me everyday to do something meaningful and worthwhile with my life so my children and their children don’t ever have to wonder where they came from. They will know and they will be so proud.
When I first got accepted to UNB Saint John, and they asked me to come play down here, I never thought in a million years that I’d be playing university volleyball, at all. So it was kind of surreal for me to have my first practice and just sit there and be like, ‘Wow, I actually made it. I’m playing for a university, I’m getting my degree.' I’m doing everything I wanna do right now and it’s perfect.
Sexual well-being is important to people. And yet, many people aren’t as sexually satisfied as they could be. This is because they have knowledge gaps, comfort gaps, negative attitudes and anxiety about sex, their sex life is influenced by too many “shoulds” that don’t really fit for them, or they have difficulty communicating their sexual likes and dislikes. To enhance their sexual well-being and sexual satisfaction, people need to learn to accept themselves for who they are. They need to be properly educated, make decisions based on their own values, and learn to communicate openly and positively about sexuality.
Read more about Sandra Byers.
Success to me is cultivating integrity, never compromising compassion, and helping create a society that nurtures those who are marginalized. Having survived conversion therapy that I was pushed into as a minor, the harms of that abuse linger - despite the trauma, plus a brief period of homelessness, I’m here only because of those who loved me in the darkest seasons of my life. I credit my supportive network, some of whom I met at UNB, like my caring thesis supervisors, Dr. Alison Luke and Dr. Shelley Doucet. Everything I am is thanks to the love I received from my family - biological and chosen - therefore, success is extending that love, creating a society built on integrity and compassion.
Thinking that what you’re going through is not valid of an emotional response, I think that can be way more damaging than people realize. Just kind of slowly, but subtly, pushing and pushing something down until eventually it can manifest into something more. It’s OK to not feel OK. Good mental health doesn’t mean you’re just always happy all the time. It means you’re able to navigate and are aware of your emotions, and can cope with the ups and downs that come along with them.
Read more about Cormac Stewart.
What you put into it is what you get out. I feel like if you just go to school and you grumble and you complain just to get through it, to get a degree, then that’s what you’ll get. But if you really take ownership of the experience and follow your heart and do stuff that you enjoy, it will pay you back.
You can’t do it all on your own. I think a lot of people, especially now that owning your own business is so over-glorified and sensationalized, there’s this impression that you’ve got to be this superstar who knows everything, but it just doesn’t work that way. It’s OK to not know everything. You’re gonna need advice. You’re gonna need other people who are experts to tell you what to do.
We know that for all these kids, when they’re going to school, it’s pretty stressful for them. Between exams, projects, and so on and so forth. So when they come up to the counter, if we can put a smile on their face, then we’re doing something right.
I was an international student myself and, I’ve gotta admit, it is one of the biggest advantages that really contributes to my job as a Transition Advisor. I’ve always wanted to make changes and would bring everyone together when I was younger; now here I am, advocating international students from personal matters to professional development. My favourite part of the job is being able to provide cultural awareness to the UNB campus and the greater New Brunswick community.
I've struggled with math a lot. That feeling of ‘I can’t get this, I’m not good at this,' and 'I’ve learned about as much math as my brain can handle’ - I know that feeling. I see it in my students. They don’t think I know that feeling, but I do. I've overcome it, and so can they.
The best part about being here at UNB is that you could get involved in so many ways to get the best of experiences and bring out the best version of yourself, no matter which faculty or program you are in. From being a TEDxUNB delegate to a RedShirt, each and every single experience I have had helped me evolve as a person and put me a step closer to achieving the things I always wanted to pursue.
It feels like every day that I’m at UNB, I’m changing. It’s very cheesy to say, but I feel like the best version of myself when I’m here because there are so many opportunities, and so many people to share them with. The people that I choose to surround myself with are constantly pushing themselves to be better; the peer mentors, my fellow proctors, my team, my friends. They motivate me to do better.