Siler, who hopes to work in pediatrics or orthopedics, initially explored the medical field at her father’s urging: He was a teacher and wrestling coach at Harford Technical High School in Maryland and encouraged her to enroll in its sports medicine track. He saw her smarts and knew she could succeed in medicine, and she relished the opportunity to say that she graduated from her father’s school.
Initially interested in becoming an athletic trainer or physical therapist, the softball player fell in love with the physician assistant field when she researched the career as part of a class assignment.
Her search for physician assistant programs brought her to Penn College, where she continued her softball career with the Wildcats and helped to initiate the team’s first “Yellow It Out” suicide prevention game, held April 3, 2019 – the fourth anniversary of her father’s death. Yellow It Out is a campuswide Penn College initiative to highlight suicide prevention and awareness. In addition to providing educational resources, events encourage students and employees to don yellow, the color associated with suicide prevention. The second-base player also played the part of the Wildcat mascot during other athletics teams’ Yellow It Out games – two basketball games and a soccer game.
“I love helping with Yellow It Out,” she said.
In addition to her efforts on campus, Siler raised almost $7,000 for the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention. Her fundraising, mainly achieved through a cornhole tournament, enabled her – along with her fiancé, her sister, Kaylee, and Kaylee’s boyfriend – to participate in the organization’s Out of the Darkness Overnight Walk in Washington, D.C., in June. The 16.2-mile walk began at dusk and concluded with a sunrise ceremony at the Lincoln Memorial. The foursome walked as the team Make Mental Matter for Gary W. Siler.
“Our fundraising far exceeded my goal,” Siler said.
It’s all part of her hope to open avenues for those who are struggling with suicidal thoughts or other mental health issues to talk – beginning with their encounters in health care.