Esra’s death shattered a family and exposed a horror hiding in plain sight. Chroming sounds almost harmless, like a prank word whispered at school, but for Esra it meant inhaling aerosol deodorant until her heart stopped. Her friends watched, confused, believing she was having a panic attack. Her parents rushed to her side only to hear a term they’d never encountered and a prognosis no parent should ever face.
In a hospital room filled with machines, Andrea and Paul were told their daughter’s brain was beyond saving. They lay beside her, holding her, making an unthinkable choice as life support was withdrawn. Now they carry not just grief, but a mission: to drag chroming out of the shadows and into the harsh light of truth. They want every kitchen table conversation, every parent, every teenager to know what they didn’t—before another child makes Esra’s fatal mistake.