Translate to your language by selecting from the box~:
USA250 Journal Project
Personal Chronicle: July 4, 2025 – July 5, 2026 A gift for reflection. A record of now. A story for what’s next.
✍️ “Who am I?”
I’m Lucia Ortiz. City girl. First in the family to get a salaried job that doesn’t require weather forecasts or worry about leaf spot.
I’m a strategist. A builder of brands. A fixer of other people’s messes.
But when I go home, I’m still the daughter. The girl who got ignored every time a tree needed pruning or a storm knocked out the power.
I left for a reason.
And yet—here I am. Still checking citrus prices like it’s a compulsion. Still defending my family when someone calls our region “backwards.” Still wondering if I ran far enough to stop caring.
I speak up. I log off. I circle back. I feel too much.
I’m trying to build something new while still carrying what broke us.
✍️ “How did I get here?”
I left the grove at eighteen and never looked back—except when I did. Over and over.
Orlando felt like air. Clean. Fast. I could be anyone. And I was. First a design intern, then a copywriter, now a campaign lead with a keycard and a standing desk and coworkers who don’t smell like pesticides.
But behind the emails and deadlines is a loop: Did I abandon them? Or did I just refuse to drown with them?
Every call from home is layered—Mama pretending the numbers look better, Papi asking about storms without asking how I am, Mateo wanting to save it all like it doesn’t cost him.
I don’t want to go back. But I do want them safe.
And lately, I’ve been wondering if the agency I work for is part of the same system pushing them out.
How did I get here?
By moving fast. By leaving early. By learning to talk like I was never raised in the dirt.
What has life taught me?
That distance doesn’t mean detachment. That legacy can look like a wound or a seed. And that sometimes, the ones who leave still love it hardest.
As an Amazon Associate, I earn from
purchases for the
products I profile or promote.
Any income I earn comes from the
relationship with Amazon and
other affiliates. I appreciate any
purchases made as it supports my
efforts to provide content.
If you would like to buy me a coffee or make a small donation to help with operating costs, this would be lovely!