
A Touch Goes a Long Way: Gloria Shares Her Story in Hopes of Inspiring Others
Meet Gloria.
It was a typical holiday season for Gloria and her family.
They spent Christmas morning opening presents, and enjoying time with one another over the next few days in anticipation of celebrating the upcoming New Year.
Gloria, then 6 years old, said she remembers the morning of her accident vividly, and that it started just like any other day. Her cousin invited her to play outside. Initially, she was hesitant about going out into the frigid Louisiana air, but decided to go anyway to escape the sounds of her mom cleaning the house inside.
Having recently watched her family burn the trash from their Christmas wrappings, as many of her neighbors did too, and shivering from the cold, Gloria and her cousin decided to make a fire to get warm. To get the fire started, they thought to use gasoline they found on the family’s property. Gloria recalls the can being full and very heavy, and while pouring the gasoline into an empty container, spilling some on her hands and wiping it on her dress.
Then, in the process of pouring gas onto the fire, she dropped the can. She recalls, “I just flew up in flames,” and went on to say, “I don't even remember the pain.” Gloria and her cousin both stood there in shock for several moments, watching the flames engulf the lower half of her little body.
Her cousin finally ran inside to get Gloria’s mom, who immediately began patting her down to extinguish the fire. Gloria was then rushed to a hospital in Baton Rouge, but her injuries were too severe and she was swiftly taken to Shriners Children’s Texas via a life flight helicopter.
Because of the severity of her pain, Gloria was placed into a medically induced coma and was unable to communicate with her family. Her mom, Michelle, recalled what it was like, and her ensuing “emotional journey” while their baby girl was being treated at Shriners Children’s. “It was very hard with me just by myself with her,” she said. “We went through a lot of ups and downs.”
Michelle credits the staff at Shriners Children's, that she now calls family, for helping her through the toughest parts of Gloria’s recovery. “Her nurse just kept telling me ‘a touch goes a long way,’” she said, “and that stuck with me.” “That was what got me through being able to see her like that,” her mom recalled about her time in the coma.
I love my surgeries. I'm not scared of them. I used to be, but I'm comfortable now because of this hospital, because of the doctors, because of the people.




