?I am not someone who knew what I wanted to do right from the beginning. I had always envisioned myself as a doctor; a future in medicine. However, I have learned that this is not where my true passion lies. I have always thoroughly enjoyed math and physics, and these have always been my favorites, and the ones in which I excel. Until my senior year, in which I took calculus, I was involved in an IMP math course, where everything was based on problem solving involving multiple variables and word problems. I constantly looked forward to these classes, and I relished the fact that we didn’t just solve straight forward questions, but had to solve complicated problems where the process to obtain a solution involved many different steps and variables and was never straightforward. In my junior year of high school, my math teacher invited me and a ten other top students where we met and heard from four women engineers. This is when my interest in engineering was sparked. They talked about the things they helped create and the different jobs they performed. I was fascinated, and began to envision myself helping create systems that didn’t require human energy inputs to operate. As I delved further into my academic career, I knew I wanted to pursue a career I was passionate about and would love doing, not a career based on the salary. This new mindset was brought about by my mother and father who told me, “If you do what you love, you’ll never work a day in your life.” The second semester of my junior year I joined robotics club to test the waters of what engineering might be like. I absolutely “fell in love”. I thoroughly enjoyed the task of building different machines and systems and loved the way I had to invest problem a multitude of skills and ideas into one project such as problem solving, math, physics, and leadership. I realized that no other career path was as suitable to me as engineering. I am fascinated with each ty