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Career Roadmap

Cynthia's work combines: Environment & Nature, Writing, and Communicating / Sharing Stories

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Day In The Life

Director of Communications and Marketing

I tell our organization's story through many different mediums and encourage people to care.

Skills & Education

Here's the path I took:

  • High School

  • Bachelor's Degree

    Sociology, General

    Pitzer College

  • Graduate Degree

    Environmental Studies

    California State University-Fullerton

Here's the path I recommend for someone who wants to be a Public Relations and Fundraising Managers:

Bachelor's Degree: Environmental Science

Graduate Degree: Environmental Science

Learn more about different paths to this career

Life & Career Milestones

I've taken a lot of twists and turns

  • 1.

    Going to college after a bad car accident left me injured and unable to work for a while.

  • 2.

    Took as many jobs as I could to test out different careers. I kept getting bored so I kept going.

  • 3.

    Kept finding new jobs but was also systematically narrowing down what I loved and hated-work wise.

  • 4.

    Found a comfortable job I thought I would like but ended up getting bored.

  • 5.

    I decided I could live in a cubicle the rest of my life, complacently or take action.

  • 6.

    Asked myself what I was truly passionate about--and then decided I would work towards a new career.

  • 7.

    Applied and got in to grad school--as a career change--which WAS NOT easy, but I wanted a new life!

  • 8.

    Studied things I loved and felt happy and "right" and found a great hybrid job!

Defining Moments

How I responded to discouragement

  • THE NOISE

    Messages from Friends:

    You'll never make money helping the environment. You shouldn't have given up a nice, well-paying corporate job for this. Passion is for hobbies, not careers. You have too many interests and requirements for work-you'll never be happy.

  • How I responded:

    Focus in on who you are. What makes you tick, what makes you happy, what moves you? Take that and try to match it to a "role" (not a job, as it may not exist) and imagine yourself doing that--do you like it? Is it attainable? If you like it, then it is attainable. A job is part of who you are--it consumes so much of your spirit that it should be a natural extension of who you are.

Experiences and challenges that shaped me

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  • I was living off practically nothing, never sure if I could make rent but somehow things fell into place when they needed to--as long as I never became greedy or solely money focused, things worked out.