At nineteen, she is already tired of living. Trapped in a family that feels more like a battlefield than a home, she grows up learning to stay quiet, to adjust, to survive. Love enters her life like a promise of escape—but instead of healing her, it teaches her loss, betrayal, and how deeply trust can wound. Every heartbreak, every argument, every tear feels unfairly heavy for her age.
Then fate breaks the rules.
She wakes up as her nine-year-old self.
This time, she remembers everything—the nights she cried alone, the words that broke her spirit, the love that almost saved her but didn't. In a child's body with an adult's pain, she starts again. She learns to speak when she was once silent, to protect her heart before giving it away, and to face her family not with fear, but with strength.
Her new life is not about changing the world—it's about saving herself. About choosing healthier love, setting boundaries, healing old wounds, and giving that little girl the future she was never allowed to dream of.
