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At just fourteen months old, Keith Edmonds faced a tragedy no child should ever endure. In 1978, his mother’s boyfriend pressed his tiny face against an electric heater, causing devastating third-degree burns across nearly half of his face. Doctors warned survival was uncertain—and even if he lived, life would never be the same. Keith lived. And from that survival grew a story of resilience, courage, and purpose.
The years that followed were grueling. Childhood for Keith was a cycle of hospital visits, surgeries at the Shriners Burn Institute in Cincinnati, and the quiet pain of growing up looking different in a world that rarely celebrates difference. Foster care, separation from his mother, and the knowledge that his attacker received only a ten-year sentence added layers of trauma. At school, whispers and stares reminded him daily that the world judged him first by his scars.
Then came a turning point. On his 35th birthday, in the midst of a binge, Keith felt clarity. He was tired of running from his past. That day, he committed to sobriety and began rebuilding his life.
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