Academics

Nursing alumna overcame hardship to pursue military nursing career

Bianca de Leon graduated in spring 2017 with a bachelor of science in nursing degree and a commission in the U.S. Navy Nurse Corps. Credit: Steve Tressler / Penn StateCreative Commons

UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — At age 5, Bianca de Leon emigrated from the Philippines to start a new life with her family in the United States. Seventeen years later, she graduated from Penn State with a bachelor of science in nursing degree and embarked on a military nursing career.

Along the way, she encountered more than the average American’s share of hardships, which she overcame thanks to perseverance and a strong support system.

“My parents wanted us to grow up in the States because they knew we would have better opportunities here,” she remembered. “At first, it was just my dad, my two older siblings, and myself. We briefly moved in with my aunt and uncle, plus their four kids and my grandma. After that, we moved five more times before I graduated from high school. “

It wasn’t until she turned 13 that de Leon's mother and younger brother were approved to join them in the United States. “My dad became a citizen in 2004 and petitioned for them to come here,” she said. “Up to then I had only been able to talk to them through a computer screen. It was surreal to be reunited with them after so many years.”

But life didn’t become easier. On her 15th birthday, de Leon applied for her first job. She worked through high school while taking Advanced Placement classes and participating in sports, scholastic clubs, and other extracurricular activities.

“Many times I would come home after a midnight shift at Sonic and see that everyone was already asleep and my mom had left me food on the table,” she said. “After eating I’d usually do my AP Calculus homework, but sometimes I was so tired I just couldn’t. Next morning I’d wake up tired, go to school tired, be unable to pay attention in class because I was tired, then go to work tired. At age 17 I thought this was all I’d ever feel.”

Though challenging, de Leon's less-than-ideal circumstances helped solidify her life plans. “For one class, I mentored an elementary school student who had behavioral issues, maybe problems at home,” she said. “And I could see myself as that little kid. I was frustrated and angry at things I couldn’t change.”

She also spent part of high school working at a retirement home, where the nursing staff worked hard to take care of the many residents. “I realized I wanted a profession where I could interact with people and help make changes to improve their lives,” she said. 

In addition, de Leon's father had open-heart surgery at age 50. Hospitalized for weeks, he missed his son’s high school graduation. “It was so hard to see him that sick and I knew I wanted to be there for him when I was older,” she said.

Inspired by her older brother, de Leon decided to apply for the Reserve Officers' Training Corps (ROTC). “I became interested because they had nursing scholarships,” she said. “At the time I wasn’t thinking that I wanted to pursue a military career. I knew that I needed to go to nursing school and this was a way that I would be able to do it.” She received a Naval ROTC scholarship at Penn State and was accepted into the four-year bachelor’s degree program in nursing.

Thanks in part to the financial support she received from ROTC and a Fran Soistman Trustee Scholarship through the College of Nursing, de Leon graduated in spring 2017 as a commissioned officer in the U.S. Navy Nurse Corps. By July, she had passed the exam to become licensed as a registered nurse (the National Council Licensure Examination, or NCLEX) and set out for her first duty station at Fort Belvoir Community Hospital in northern Virginia.

“I remember sitting in my moving truck just thinking, ‘Wow, this is it. I did it,'" she said. “This was a day I thought would never come.”

De Leon is philosophical about her achievements, which she credits to the supportive environment she grew up in.

“I grew up with food stamps and hand-me-down clothes that didn’t always fit right. Not a day goes by that I don’t think about having to share a twin bed with my sister or remember my dad (a pharmacy technician) coming home in the dead of night from his second job at the Shell gas station,” she said. “Despite my upbringing, I flourished because my teachers believed in me, my family pushed me, and this country gave an immigrant family a chance to prove themselves.

“When all you have is the determination to change your situation, you can change it,” she concluded. “Don’t ever become a victim of circumstance.”

Last Updated February 19, 2018