PROFILE: Wayward Son Finds All Roads Lead to Marietta
Applying for college was the last thing on 18-year-old Mike Pankowski’s mind that day when his mom came into the room and she told him he didn’t have a choice.
Mike lived in the present and with prom coming up and his girlfriend on his arm the world couldn’t have been better. But his mom was serious so he applied to three colleges, one of them being Marietta College.
“My mom took me up to Marietta four weekends in a row to see the school and the baseball coach wanted me here too so I said OK let’s do it,†said Pankowski.
That was in 2005 and Mike is still on his path of discovery, finding himself back at Marietta for the third time in 2010. It wasn’t an easy journey but one he learned from.
“I am not one to regret things, as I stand behind every action I have taken. If I could ‘change’ one aspect of my life, it would have been my decision to neglect the college search. I believe that if I would have listened to my mother and taken the time to look at colleges of all types and sizes, then my life would have been different. I am not saying for the better, but none-the-less, completely different. Change is never bad, but a different challenge in life that opens up new doors to opportunity,†said Pankowski.
The summer of 2005 came and went quickly and Mike found himself in his first semester freshmen year that went really well ending up with a 3.1 GPA. The beginning was a little rocky because when the first baseball practice rolled around, he slept through it. The ironic thing is though it ended up working out well in the end because track and field became his new passion.
“Everything happens for a reason and one day I decided to talk to Coach (Derek) Stanley and ask if I could throw the javelin because I had done it in high school,†said Pankowski. “I got really into it and ended up getting the school record that spring.â€
Unfortunately Mike blew out his back that spring as well and he lost a lot of his direction in life. When he came back for the fall ready for track and field he tore his ACL during an intramural flag football game. From then on, it all went down hill and any direction or motivation Mike had was gone. That semester consisted of surgery, rehab and no schoolwork. So when grades came along, straight C’s didn’t let him keep his scholarship and his parents told him they weren’t paying anymore.
“I had to make a decision at that point and I didn’t know what I wanted to do with my life so I decided some time off was the best option,†said Pankowski. “I didn’t tell anyone I was leaving because it was really embarrassing. I had a lot of friends at school and I feel like I let down a lot of people.â€
Pankowski’s best friend Kevin Rykaceski has stood by his side through all his ups and downs.
“Mike and I have been friends since we were 10 years old after I beat him up playing basketball, I guess that united us because we still hang out all the time,†said Rykaceski. “Mike’s that one friend that when either of us are having a bad day we call each other up and I mean if he called me one day and said he wanted to go to Hawaii, I would go.â€
Mike got a job at a pool company where he eventually became a pool manger and in the spotlight all the time. Then one day at work in 2008 it all hit him at once.
“I was standing there with all these people around me asking questions and damning orders out of me as I’m trying to organize everything and I had to go, I had to get out of there,†said Pankowski. “I went to lunch by myself and right then and there decided to go back to Marietta.â€
So Mike decided to go back to Marietta for a semester and just signed up for classes and went. There were still a lot of people there he knew so needless to say some were in shock when he dropped off the planet for two years and then just showed up at school one day.
“I just wanted to go to school for a semester and prove to myself I could do it, so I took three classes and got A’s in all three,†said Pankowski. “But I still didn’t know what I wanted to do so I went back to work.â€
That next year was when Mike really found his true passion and put everything together. He was working at a lumberyard 6am-530pm, at the pool, taking night classes three days a week and waiting tables on the weekend. He also starting mountain biking and fell in love with the outdoors.
“Me and my friends would go on trips and live off the land for five days at a time, I absolutely loved it,†said Pankowski. “This brought me to realize what I really wanted to do with my life and that I wanted to go back to school to study environmental science.â€
So in October 2009 Mike found himself calling Coach Stanley again, applying for classes and renting an apartment in downtown Marietta. It had been a long journey but he knew for sure this time he wanted to be there and it was worth his money.
Pankowski’s Javelin coach now, Ken Ciolek had only positive things to say about his return.
“From the two conversations that we had I knew that I was dealing with a rare breed. Mike is the type of person that all teachers, and coaches search for. Motivated to succeed and eager to learn along with the type of understanding of the “big picture” that many of us are still trying to grasp and understand. I find myself learning from him as much if not more that he learns from me in our correspondence at javelin practice,†said Ciolek.
With the rest of his life before him Mike looks back on his experiences with knowledge and understanding.
“My experiences showed me that there is more to life than that great car, the cool group, or the college degree. Yes, I feel with my degree I will prove myself to many, but it takes more than that for someone to prove themselves to me. I have met people with a high school education who work in the real world, and I would be willing to put my life in their hands over 95 percent of the people at Marietta College, or all college grads for that matter,†said Pankowski. “Point is, the world revolves around the belief that winning this competition makes a person, or the college degree makes me better than you and so on. My experiences helped me realize who I was, and who I wanted to be, not because of my neighbor or because of her/his success in life, but because I now have 1,000 doors in front of me, and it’s up to me, and only me to pick the path of my life. It’s my life to live, my life to choose and my life to party.â€
EDITOR’S NOTE:  This article is by Danielle Staub, a Media Writing Two student at Marietta College.  If you are interested in writing for Writing on the Mall, send an e-mail to Patrick_H@writingonthemall.net.
Posted by Danielle_S Date: Thursday, April 29, 2010
Tags: baseball, Coach, College, Company, Derek Stanley, Injury, Javelin, Ken Ciolek, Marietta, Mike Pankowski, Ohio, pool, Track and Field, Writing on the Mall
Marcolian Round-Up!
A new school year brings us a new Marcolian…or at least in paper form. Â The Marc website has not been updated to reflect the new stories.
If you’re looking for another helpful student media, the Marcolian is less of a newsy paper (usually runs every other week, but that may be changing) and more of a magazine. Â They cover big campus events, but tell more of the story than just telling you what happened. Â There are more editorials and opportunities for students to speak their mind and get their point across.
Headlines in this week’s Marcolian:
- Matriculation Ceremony takes place tonight
- Marietta College ranked 112th in Nation
- MC Students travel to Central America
- Planetarium community events scheduled for August, September
- Soccer coach expects greatness
- Football team prepares for season of growth
- Local Churches
- Student Discounts
- Fine Arts on Campus
- President welcomes Class of 2013
- Senior gives prospective on summer
- Del Mar’s Baja Grill disappoints
- Freshman offers fresh perspective
- Campus Organizations
- Cable Channel Guide
Writing on the Mall will be posting a few more guides now based off of a few of the Marc articles (Church Guide, Campus Organization Guide), but already has guides featuring the Cable Channel Listing (which was updated today to include digital channels for those with Digital Tuners), Area Concert Guide, and more.
And as a side note, Del Mar’s is really tasty (in my opinion) so I disagree with the Op/Ed saying that it lacks flavor and experience. Â They just opened, they’re still training and hiring. Â Cut them some slack. Â And I think its tasty and flavorful. Â But make your own opinion.
Pick up a copy of the Marcolian today to read all of the articles they have this week.
Posted by Patrick_H Date: Monday, August 24, 2009
Categories: Campus
Tags: 2013, Anderson-Hancock Planetarium, August, Cable, Campus, Central America, Church, Coach, College, Concert, Del Mar's, Discounts, Fine Arts, Forbes, Freshman, Freshmen, Guide, Magazine, Marc, Marcolian, Marietta, Matriculation, Media, Newspaper, Ohio, Organizations, Planetarium, President, Rank, ranking, Rankings, Religion, September, Soccer, Student, Students, Upperclassman, Upperclassmen, US News, Web, website, World Report, Writing on the Mall











