Beach Voices: A life-changing journey from addiction, incarceration to a master鈥檚 degree
Never let your past define who you are today.
To get where I am now has taken a long journey.
For more than 40 years, I once spent my life engulfed in my addiction.
I couldn鈥檛 stop putting a needle in my arms. I was in and out of juvenile facilities from the age of 11 and throughout my adolescence.
At 18, after I鈥檇 graduated from high school, I was offered the option to join the military or go to prison.
I spent four years in the U.S. Army and was honorably discharged. Even so, I immediately resumed my previous behavior after being released from jail. Throughout the following 30 years, I found myself in and out of prison. Gangs and prisons was the only life I knew.
I started my journey in recovery over 10 years ago, and almost nine years ago, I began my educational journey. I started at Orange Coast College in Costa Mesa, and 3 陆 years later, I transferred to the Beach in 2018. I graduated in 2020 with a bachelor鈥檚 degree in .
While at The Beach, I got involved in Project Rebound, a program that recruits and supports formerly incarcerated students looking to advance their education at 好色先生.
During my last two years in undergrad, I made straight A's and the President's Honor List the final two semesters. I also qualified for the Dean's List because I finished with a 3.67 GPA. I'm now getting ready to graduate with my Master of Social Work (MSW) degree.
I've had nothing but a beautiful experience here at the Beach. All my professors in the MSW were the best. However, I would be remiss if I didn't give a shout-out to a couple of professors who had a significant impact on this educational journey of mine: Associate Professor Steven Osuna, Ph.D., and Associate Professor Esa Syeed, Ph.D., both at the Department of Sociology.
The love and respect I have for those two are immeasurable. Both were instrumental in my pursuit of my MSW at The Beach. I was hired over two months ago. After graduating, I started my employment with an organization that works with system-impacted adolescents, formerly incarcerated young adults and older adults. This is my dream job, to give back to the community that I had robbed for so many years. I really do have a life beyond my comprehension.
Joseph Valadez 鈥20 will receive his master鈥檚 degree in social work May 17. He is a proud product of The Beach鈥檚 Project Rebound program, aimed to help formerly incarcerated students.
Beach Voices is an occasional feature that allows members of The Beach community 鈥 students, faculty, staff and alumni 鈥 to share their firsthand experiences. If you would like to be considered, send submissions labeled 鈥淏each Voices鈥 to鈥StratComm@csulb.edu.鈥&苍产蝉辫;