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I was born in Thailand in 2003, but I grew up along the border in a place called Shwe Ko Koe.
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I feel both nervous and excited at the same time.
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I moved to the village because my dad didn’t have time to look after me.
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This was my first day arriving in Thailand to study at an organization called Help Save the Kids.
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Firstly, the school had a mix of cultures and ethnicities. It was also a Christian school. The teachers came from different backgrounds such as Thai, foreign, and Karen.
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This was the year I accepted Jesus Christ as my Savior.
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This was the first prayer my teachers asked us to write. They told us to write down what we wanted in our prayer so that later we could look back and see what had happened. I wrote about things that would happen in the future, even though I didn’t know them yet.
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God answered the prayer I had been praying since 2017. I asked Him to let me meet my mom, even though most people said she was no longer alive. I never thought I would get the chance to see her, but God made it possible. My mom had divorced my dad when I was only three years old, and after she left, no one knew where she had gone.
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I graduated from the ACE program, which was a homeschooling system. I completed all my schoolwork in the organization that was formerly called Help Save the Kids, and is now known as Global Advance Project.
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After I graduated, I applied for a job in Mae Sot at an international school. I started working there immediately and spent almost two years in that role.
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I began searching for universities I wanted to attend and started preparing for admission. I also visited AIU before enrolling.
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This was the time I arrived on the AIU campus and got to explore and experience university life, something I never thought I would have the chance to attend.
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Now I am a sophomore student at AIU, and I feel proud to be part of this community. I look forward to seeing what God has in store for my future. I am also grateful to the people who supported me on this journey, knowing that many others wish to attend university but don’t get the chance.