One ordinary school day, one tiny Canadian town, and a 12-year-old girl whose whole life flipped in a single breath. Maya Gebala wasn’t doing anything extraordinary that morning at Tumbler Ridge Secondary School in Tumbler Ridge, British Columbia. She was just being herself: the stubborn, defiant kid who taught herself to walk on stilts, who flew across the ice in her hockey helmet, who never believed in the words “I can’t.” She was in the library, focused on a catapult project, surrounded by friends and the safe, quiet hum of a normal day.

May be an image of baby, hospital and text that says 'Shefali ShefaliSethi Sethi Shetel ShetaSethi Sethi อัง + A BULLET CHANGED EVERYTHING'

One ordinary school day, one tiny Canadian town, and a 12-year-old girl whose whole life flipped in a single breath. Maya Gebala wasn’t doing anything extraordinary that morning at Tumbler Ridge Secondary School in Tumbler Ridge, British Columbia. She was just being herself: the stubborn, defiant kid who taught herself to walk on stilts, who flew across the ice in her hockey helmet, who never believed in the words “I can’t.” She was in the library, focused on a catapult project, surrounded by friends and the safe, quiet hum of a normal day.
Then the unthinkable walked through the doors. A 17-year-old former student, who had already killed her own mother and half-brother at home, came into the school and opened fire. In seconds, the library became a war zone. Maya tried to help protect others, moving to lock the door, trying to shield her classmates from what was coming. Bullets ripped through her earlobe, tore into her head, exited the back of her skull, and lodged in her throat. Six beautiful lives were stolen in that mᴀssacre: three 12-year-old girls, including two of Maya’s close friends, two boys, and a beloved education ᴀssistant who loved those kids like her own.
Maya was airlifted to BC Children’s Hospital in Vancouver, clinging to life. Doctors induced a coma and told her parents, Cia and David, that she might not survive, that even if she did, nothing was guaranteed. Since then, her journey has been a brutal mix of tiny miracles and terrifying setbacks. She has opened her eyes, moved her hands and legs, and shown glimmers that the fierce girl everyone loves is still fighting inside. At the same time, she has battled brain swelling, dangerous fluid buildup that needed emergency surgery and a drain, constant leaks of cerebral fluid and blood, a breathing tube in her throat that keeps her from speaking, and the emotional whiplash of steps forward followed by painful steps back.
Through all of this, her family is living their own nightmare. Her little sister Dahlia, who lived through the same lockdown terror and begged on the phone, “Mommy go home, it isn’t safe,” carries the trauma of that day while trying to be brave enough to stand by her sister’s bedside and hold her hand. Their mom writes to Maya like she’s both right there and a million miles away, calling her a force of nature, her “sweetpea,” her “Maya moon,” praying for the day she truly comes back. And somehow, in the middle of that heartbreak, her parents still find room for graтιтude for every message, every prayer, every stranger who refuses to look away.
There isn’t a neat ending to this story yet. Maya is still in a fragile fight. Her family is still riding the waves of hope and fear. But what’s clear is this: a little girl who once lived like she had a thousand lives is now fighting fiercely for this one, and a town, a family, and thousands of people far beyond Tumbler Ridge are standing behind her. Keep her name on your lips. Keep her family in your thoughts. Share her story so the world doesn’t forget what was taken from her, and what she’s fighting to take back.

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