Current:Home > MyHe overcame leukemia, homelessness. Now this teen is getting a bachelor's in neuroscience. -Triumph Financial Guides
He overcame leukemia, homelessness. Now this teen is getting a bachelor's in neuroscience.
View
Date:2025-04-19 20:43:36
Dallas Salas talks really fast. The Phoenix teenager moves from topic to topic, touching on the many things he's passionate about, most of which revolve around helping others.
But his conversational tone isn't the only thing about Salas that moves at the speed of sound. He's about to complete his bachelor's degree in neuroscience at just 18 years old, and he's got a lot of post-graduate plans.
"I am as open a book as possible," Salas told USA TODAY, "although people usually skip my story because the pages do not match the cover."
Judge this book by his cover, and you'll miss a lot. Salas' story is one filled with twists and turns, ups and downs. His family lost their Scottsdale, Arizona, home to arson when Dallas was a young child, plunging them into homelessness. His father, a member of the Latin Kings, a notoriously violent gang, is incarcerated.
His mom, whose own life is the stuff of novels, overcame domestic violence and has seen her other children struggle with mental illness, hydrocephalus and autism. Dallas had leukemia as a child, though he recently learned he's now in full remission.
His life, he admitted, has been "truly a roller coaster."
"But I think it shows just how resilient I am, how good I am at overcoming obstacles that get in my way."
'A lot of determination and perseverance'
While he was a high school student at Arizona State Preparatory Academy, an online K-12 school, he was also taking courses at Maricopa Community Colleges and Arizona State University. He'll graduate from ASU in December.
When he began studying at ASU Prep, he was struggling academically, but he worked with Kristen Rund, a digital learning success coach.
"He really showed a lot of determination and perseverance," Rund recalled. It's not uncommon for students to struggle when they transition from a traditional, in-person school to virtual study, she said, but Salas understood how important academic success would be for his future.
"I saw him grow, and we'd talk through strategies, discuss what worked for him and what didn't. His strength is really his intrinsic motivation, being the best person academically that he can be."
Constance Salas, Dallas' mother, saw her son struggling in school, and believed it was because he wasn't feeling sufficiently challenged. A friend told her about ASU Prep, and she thought it might be a better fit for her son.
'When he was 7, he wanted a filing cabinet'
Even as a small child, she said, Dallas was precocious.
"He was never a normal child," she said. Her other children would ask for toys; Dallas wanted pens, pencils and papers to write down his thoughts. "When he was 7, he wanted a filing cabinet."
Constance tried to protect her son from the chaos surrounding him, steering him away from television and giving him books. Still, she gives him all the credit for his accomplishments.
"It's amazing," she said. "He's worked so hard. Sometimes I worried he might burn out, but then I realized that I had planted this seed, and I had to step back and see if it would grow."
That growth, Salas hopes, will lead him to Arizona State's Sandra Day O'Connor School of Law, to pursue his interest in Civil Rights and LGBTQ+ rights. And perhaps eventually to the Mayo Clinic's Alix School of Medicine, where he'd like to study neurosurgery.
Family's early struggles helped mold teen
Salas talks about his past in a very matter-of-fact way: He has a close relationship with his father but acknowledges having to separate the loving parent he knows from the crimes he's accused of committing. He credits holistic medicine with overcoming leukemia, even as he plans a career in modern medicine. His family's struggles, he said, made him into the person he is.
Even his mother, though proud, is surprised at how much he's done in such a short period of time. She thought about scaling back his academic demands so he could enjoy more of his childhood, but her son wasn't having it: "Dallas has outsmarted me every time," she said with a chuckle.
"Living in hotels and not knowing what was going to happen each day really set me up for success," he said. "I'm always expecting the unexpected."
Contact Phaedra Trethan by email at [email protected] or on X (formerly Twitter) @wordsbyphaedra.
veryGood! (95)
Related
- The Grammy nominee you need to hear: Esperanza Spalding
- 'Shazam! Fury of the Gods' has lost some magic
- 'The Last Animal' is a bright-eyed meditation on what animates us
- 'Phantom of the Opera' takes a final Broadway bow after 13,981 performances
- A Mississippi company is sentenced for mislabeling cheap seafood as premium local fish
- The Sunday Story: The unspoken rules of hip-hop
- Your Guide to Mascara Cocktailing—The Lash Hack All Over TikTok
- An ode to playlists, the perfect kind of sonic diary
- Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Triathlon
- Afroman put home footage of a police raid in music videos. Now the cops are suing him
Ranking
- DeepSeek: Did a little known Chinese startup cause a 'Sputnik moment' for AI?
- Gwyneth Paltrow appears in a Utah court for a trial over a 2016 ski crash
- Biden taps Lady Gaga to co-chair an arts advisory committee that dissolved under Trump
- Kim Kardashian's SKIMS Presidents' Day Deals: Save Up to 50% On These 25 Top-Selling Styles
- Sonya Massey's father decries possible release of former deputy charged with her death
- Below Deck's Katie Glaser Reacts to Alissa Humber's Firing
- Kelis Shares Rare Insight Into Family Life on Her Remote Farm in California
- Ryuichi Sakamoto, a godfather of electronic pop, has died
Recommendation
Brianna LaPaglia Reveals The Meaning Behind Her "Chickenfry" Nickname
90 Day Fiancé's Shaeeda Sween and Bilal Hazziez Share They've Suffered a Miscarriage
Nick Jonas Shares How Priyanka Chopra, Sophie Turner and Danielle Jonas Influence Jonas Brothers' Music
Butter by Keba: 7 Must-Know Products From the Black-Founded Skincare Brand
Justice Department, Louisville reach deal after probe prompted by Breonna Taylor killing
See Mark Consuelos Join Kelly Ripa and Ryan Seacrest on Live After Co-Host Announcement
'Fresh Air' marks the final season of 'Succession,' with Cox, Culkin and Macfadyen
Shop the Cutest Inclusively Designed Journals, Planners & Home Decor From Be Rooted