At sixteen, my world burned down—literally. One bitter January night, I lost nearly everything: my parents, my grandfather, my home, and the childhood I’d barely finished living. Pulled from the flames barefoot in pajamas, I stood shivering in the snow, watching the life I knew vanish in smoke and silence.
I survived. But survival isn’t the same as living. From that night on, I felt untethered.
With no parents to care for me, I was placed in a youth housing program. It was safe, clean, and quiet—but it felt more like a waiting room than a home. My only living relative, Aunt Denise, claimed half the insurance payout, promising to support me. Instead, she spent it on herself.
Grief settled in like fog. But in the stillness, I found baking.