EBOOK

About
"I thought of all scenarios. Except her not coming home."
She had planned for everything. The nursery. The daycare. The ninety percent prognosis. Ana Rivera Eckles - a woman forged in the South Bronx, shaped by military service, divorce, and a love that was complicated long before it was redemptive - had run through every scenario she could imagine for the daughter she was carrying.
Ariana lived for four days.
What followed was February - the grief that lives not just in the heart but in the chest, the body's own insistence on mourning, the death certificate that arrived before the birth certificate, the nursery door that stayed closed for months. And then April - a world so surreally beautiful it felt almost cruel. And then the slow, unglamorous work of continuing.
Four Days traces the arc of a life - the whirlwind love with a man who threatened her existence simply by being who she was, the blended family built at great cost and held together by decisions made in the dark, the career forged from loss, the twins who arrived thirteen months after February like Ariana had sent them herself.
It is a memoir about grief and redemption. About the physical reality of heartbreak. About a leadership philosophy that can only be built from having survived the unsurvivable. About what it means to carry a four-day life into every room you enter - invisibly, permanently, and on purpose.
Most of all, it is a book about Ariana. Who lived four days. And has never stopped working.
For anyone who has carried a loss no one else could see. For anyone who needs to know that living both happy and sad is not only possible - it is the most necessary human condition.
She had planned for everything. The nursery. The daycare. The ninety percent prognosis. Ana Rivera Eckles - a woman forged in the South Bronx, shaped by military service, divorce, and a love that was complicated long before it was redemptive - had run through every scenario she could imagine for the daughter she was carrying.
Ariana lived for four days.
What followed was February - the grief that lives not just in the heart but in the chest, the body's own insistence on mourning, the death certificate that arrived before the birth certificate, the nursery door that stayed closed for months. And then April - a world so surreally beautiful it felt almost cruel. And then the slow, unglamorous work of continuing.
Four Days traces the arc of a life - the whirlwind love with a man who threatened her existence simply by being who she was, the blended family built at great cost and held together by decisions made in the dark, the career forged from loss, the twins who arrived thirteen months after February like Ariana had sent them herself.
It is a memoir about grief and redemption. About the physical reality of heartbreak. About a leadership philosophy that can only be built from having survived the unsurvivable. About what it means to carry a four-day life into every room you enter - invisibly, permanently, and on purpose.
Most of all, it is a book about Ariana. Who lived four days. And has never stopped working.
For anyone who has carried a loss no one else could see. For anyone who needs to know that living both happy and sad is not only possible - it is the most necessary human condition.