Miranda Betancourt began her college career as a theater major. However, declaring this commitment was one of the most frightening, exciting, and empowering things she has ever done. Betancourt had been faced with a number of different paths to take, so deciding her major felt like a breakthrough. She could finally take a breath of fresh air.
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Betancourt had many passions as a child, she was very crafty and liked learning new things. Growing up, she loved to play doctor, making her own IV bags out of yarn and ziploc baggies. She would cater to âpatientsâ (her dolls) by checking their blood pressure and heart rates until they were cleared as healthy.
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âMy grandma gave me a Walgreens pen that looked just like a syringe full of blood,â said Betancourt. âI freaking loved that pen, I used to act like the person whoâd draw your blood all the time.â
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Betancourtâs love for science and anatomy didnât stop when she went to grade school. She had books for kids on virus and anatomy, where her love and fascination flourished.
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âThe doctor thought it was really weird,â said Betancourt. âWhenever I had to go to the doctorâs, Iâd bring my own books and Iâd talk to them about what I was learning.â
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Betancourtâs interest in science and biology at such a young age not only surprised her doctor but excited him. He was certain her passion was not just a phase, but a real career Betancourt would hopefully follow.
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âMy doctor was so ready for me to go to college and become a doctor,â said Betancourt. âHe was so ready. I remember the day I told him I was going to study theater and just the look on his face, he couldnât believe it.â
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Betancourtâs true turning point in her decision to re-evaluate her passion for medicine happened during a medical camp at Northwestern University. She was scheduled to be there for a week, but was having second thoughts about going.
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âI changed my mind and decided maybe it wasnât worth it, maybe medicine isnât for me,â said Betancourt.
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Betancourtâs love for science was being questioned due to her involvement in her high school theater. She began to find herself wanting to spend more time directing or on stage, rather than in a laboratory. Betancourt admitted that she did indeed love science, but she had found a new passion in her life: theater.
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âI realized at camp that I just wanted to go back to high school to be in the theater all day,â said Betancourt.
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From an early age, Betancourt loved arts and crafts, and she always had some sort of artistic or performance as a hobby. However, this was always intertwined with her interest in the sciences.
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âMy parents were very excited about the chance of going as pre-med,â said Betancourt. âThey thought that was what I was going to do. But as I grew older, my mom started realizing that probably wasnât going to happen since I was also into music and literatureâmaybe even more than science.â
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Betancourtâs confession of choosing to go a completely different route than the majority of people in her life thought she would unnerved her. But her parents supported her decision and were happy to help her through all her endeavors.
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âMy mom studied art,â said Betancourt. âShe wanted to be a museum curator and because her parents didnât let her study what she wanted, they didnât have such a big problem with me deciding go to into the arts if thatâs what I wanted to do.â
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Choosing a different path than she envisioned  was a unsettling commitment Betancourt had to overcome. At times she couldnât help but wonder what her future or life would have been like if she didnât listen to her gut.
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âI know myself and I would have forced myself to stick with it, with the hopes that it in the end Iâd like it,â said Betancourt. âI’d say, âI donât like bio now but when I get to med school itâs going to be cool. Oh, I donât like studying medicine now but when Iâm actually practicing I will.â I would have been fine, but I would have felt fulfilled.â
Betancourt admits that going into the arts has many uncertainties in comparison to a stable position within a hospital.
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âIn theater, youâre constantly looking for the next thing. Youâre always hunting for the next job, and it worries me,â said Betancourt.
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Yet, those uncertainties are what motivate her to continue. The prospect of being successful in the theater scene drives away her worries about not having a âtraditionalâ or âstableâ job.
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âIâm trying to let go of all of these preconceived notions of what a successful job is and focus on doing the things I want and being happy,â said Betancourt. âIt doesnât really matter if Iâm living paycheck to paycheck to save up to do something fun. Because at the end of the day, if Iâm happy, does it matter how?â