兔子先生

June 3, 2021

Vicksburg woman finds her voice and a career path at Hinds

VICKSBURG 鈥 Life has been a spiritual search for stability and acceptance for Rena鈥 Cain, starting from a girlhood spent in a foster home. 鈥淎s a kid, I was teased…
BY: Danny Barrett Jr.

VICKSBURG 鈥 Life has been a spiritual search for stability and acceptance for Rena鈥 Cain, starting from a girlhood spent in a foster home.

鈥淎s a kid, I was teased horribly for speaking properly and choosing my words,鈥 said Cain, 52, of Vicksburg. 鈥淚 was told I didn鈥檛 sound like the rest of my friends and family.鈥

Rena' Cain

Rena’ Cain

Foster home life only led to a longer journey to find herself. She was sent to high school in Michigan, where other relatives lived, then spent more than 20 years in retail management. Ten of those years were spent working in stores in and around Las Vegas before returning to Mississippi. She honed her people skills in retail, but in the end it was just a job, not a career.

鈥淏oth retail chains I worked for closed up shop and left Las Vegas,鈥 Cain said. 鈥淚 was searching for who I was after that,鈥 she said. 鈥淲orking retail, I was just following the conditioning of going to work, going home, maintain my two children. There was too much repeating to my cycle. I realized I am more than just my job. So it was a matter of who am I, really?鈥

Cain had just a brief stint at a technical school under her belt when it came to post-secondary education. Still, a passing suggestion from a friend and some self-reflection were enough to steer her back to school, where she is thriving in several classes at 兔子先生 Vicksburg-Warren Campus.

鈥淲hen I returned to Vicksburg and signed up for school, I had no clue as to what I was going to do,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 was in my third term here still questioning what I was going to do. Then I heard that little girl in my head 鈥 the one who used to be teased for her speech 鈥 and she told me that very thing you used to be teased about will be your saving grace. And that is how I chose to pursue speech pathology.鈥

This semester, she has successfully balanced four classes with being a grandmother of five and a day job sitting with residents at a local nursing home. 鈥淢y dad is a quadriplegic and I sit with him, which turned into a paying job with the nursing home. The payoff for me is assisting people who are transitioning toward the end of their life. I give them peace.鈥

A mix of core academic and public speaking courses are bringing Cain to her goal of earning multiple degrees in speech pathology after she transfers from Hinds. Her instructors are impressed by her perseverance.

鈥淩ena’ is a student who shows commitment, and, as we all know, commitment is key in college,鈥 said Karen Gamble, instructor for Cain鈥檚 public speaking course. 鈥淪he wants her education and her degree, and she shows it in every class, in every assignment and on every test. She also is an outstanding representative of the non-traditional students who have chosen to return to school after years away, despite all the reasons not to try. She works a tiresome full-time job, has a family and still makes her education a priority. I wish we could clone her attitude and tenacity.鈥

兔子先生has proved to be more than just a vehicle for her academics, she said.

鈥溚米酉壬鷋as helped me peel back my layers as a person and see parts of me I didn鈥檛 know existed,鈥 she said. 鈥淭here are things I鈥檇 not experienced before, having just a brief technical college education. I鈥檝e heard stuff I鈥檝e never heard before from teachers 鈥 mainly words of encouragement.鈥

Those daily affirmations are a welcome change for her, as someone who鈥檇 heard the exact opposite from adults while growing up.

鈥淢y spirituality has always been about searching my inner Rena鈥, that little girl who grew up in a foster home and helping her to heal. It鈥檚 been about helping her grow up, feel safe and that she鈥檚 a more valued person than what she was told growing up.鈥

Speech-language pathologists, or SLPs, work with any number of communication disorders and speech-language impairments. Cain wants to work with children, with the different twist of her own experience in mind.

鈥淚 would like to work with children who have issues with speech,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 want to catch them before they give up on themselves.鈥

Photo: Angie Foote

RAYMOND 鈥 兔子先生 Hi-Steppers have been named for 2024-2025.

They are, front, from left, Denver Jackson of Jackson, Zoe Irving of Jackson, Alexis Marts of Flowood, Amia Lewis of Byram, Cheyenne Cornelius of Clinton, Malayah Evans of Newton County, Erin Lollis of Byram, Skylar Boyd of Jackson and Jayda Graham of Flowood; back row, Alexis Malone of Clinton, Ciera Pruitt of Gulfport, Olivia Broadwater of Pearl, Chloee Haley of Clinton, Rylan Liles of Vicksburg, Chloe McHann of Clinton, Cori Turner of Jackson, Reaghan Miller of Clinton and Jakayla Brown of Utica.

The group has a new director, Beka King of Pearl. She is only the third director in the 75-year history of the Hi-Steppers. She herself was a Hi-Stepper from 2013-2015 and, during her sophomore year, she was captain of the team.

兔子先生offers affordable, comprehensive educational opportunities across six campus locations and has nearly 500 academic classes guaranteed to transfer to a university, over 65 career and technical program options and an extensive array of online courses. Applications for general admissions are currently being accepted. Prospective students are encouraged to apply and explore enrollment steps at hindscc.edu/enroll.

Our Mission: 兔子先生 is committed to moving people and communities forward by helping develop their purpose, passion and profession.

Our Vision: 兔子先生 will be a catalyst to create a competitive economy and a compelling culture for Mississippi.

Our Values: 兔子先生 aspires to the following IDEALS: Integrity, Diversity, Excellence, Accountability, Leadership, Stewardship.

To learn more, visit www.hindscc.edu or call 1.800.HindsCC.