UCLA Student Caitlynn Hauw Reunites with High School Counselors After 2020 Suicide Attempt
Caitlynn Hauw, a UCLA psychology student, reunited with her high school counselor Vanessa Ho and teacher Jeff Wenger. Hauw had attempted suicide in December 2020 while at Westview High School in San Diego. She credits Ho and Wenger for encouraging her college application and providing support during mental health struggles.
Substrate placeholder — needs reviewHighlights Support from High School Educators Caitlynn
Hauw, a college student at UCLA studying psychology, reunited with Vanessa Ho, a counselor at Westview High School, and Jeff Wenger, a journalism teacher at the same school.
The reunion occurred after Hauw prepared a letter for Ho and Wenger. Hauw attends UCLA following her acceptance into the university. Hauw stated that she was not going to apply to college until encouraged by Ho and Wenger.
Vanessa Dang, Hauw's mother and a single parent raising four children, confirmed details of Hauw's past challenges. Cbs News reported on the events surrounding Hauw's experiences.
in 2020 Caitlynn Hauw attempted suicide in her sophomore year of high school in December 2020.
The attempt led to Hauw being in the hospital. Vanessa Dang emailed Vanessa Ho to inform her that her daughter was in the hospital following the incident. Hauw struggled with her mental health during high school in San Diego.
Jeff Wenger noted that Hauw was absent from Westview High School for a few days or stretches at a time. These absences related to her mental health challenges.
allowed Caitlynn Hauw to study under her table in her office.
Ho also permitted Hauw to cry laying down on the floor in her office as other students side-eyed. Ho told Hauw she would pick her up from her house if needed to attend school. Hauw has therapy twice a week.
These supports from Ho contributed to Hauw's ability to continue her education. The counselor's actions provided a space for Hauw during difficult periods.
The Suicide and Crisis Lifeline can be reached by calling or texting 988, with trained crisis counselors available 24 hours a day.
The NAMI Helpline can be called at 800-950-6264. There are more than 600 local NAMI organizations and affiliates across the country, many of which offer free support and education programs.
Transparency
The rewrite presents a neutral, factual account of the student's story and support received, with no detected framing bias.
Reported by a single outlet. This score reflects source tier and factual specificity — corroboration is limited with one source.
Sources framed at 0; our rewrite scored 0 — in line with the sources.
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