I'm 21, I've been putting myself through community college for three years, and I'm finally ready to transfer to a CSU. But the cost is hitting me like a truck. I work 30 hours a week and still can barely afford rent and food. How am I supposed to pay for a four-year university? 
My financial situation:
Cal Grant B
For other transfer students with no family support: how are you doing it? What scholarships actually came through? What am I missing? I need all the advice I can get.
My financial situation:
- No family support (estranged from parents)
- Work 30 hours at a coffee shop ($16/hr)
- Current monthly expenses: rent ($800), food ($300), transportation ($150), other ($200)
- Savings: about $2,000
- Tuition and fees: ~$7,500/year
- Housing: ~$15,000/year (if I'm lucky)
- Books and supplies: ~$1,500/year
- Food, transportation, etc.: ~$5,000/year
- TOTAL: around $29,000/year

Cal Grant B
- Provides up to $1,672/year for living expenses plus tuition coverage
- Requires FAFSA by March 2
- Up to $5,000/year for students who were in foster care
- Each CSU has foundation scholarships
- Some are specifically for transfer students
- Deadlines vary by campus — need to check each one
- Jack Kent Cooke Foundation — $55,000/year (dream big)
- Horatio Alger — up to $25,000
- Point Foundation — for LGBTQ students
- First-Gen Scholarships — many exist
- On-campus jobs (usually more flexible with class schedules)
- Work-study (need to qualify via FAFSA)
- Full-time summer work to save for the year
For other transfer students with no family support: how are you doing it? What scholarships actually came through? What am I missing? I need all the advice I can get.