
Two weeks ago, we were forced to face the greatest challenge of our lives, a moment that arrived without warning and shattered everything we thought we understood about safety, normalcy, and tomorrow.
It was an accident, one of those cruel fragments of fate that no one plans for, no one imagines, and no one ever believes will touch their own family until it does, suddenly, violently, and without mercy.
I know that many of the people who are here with us now, praying, sending love, offering strength, and hoping for the recovery of our little Luquinhas, still do not truly know what happened on that day that changed our lives forever.

Luquinhas was in a familiar place, a space filled with love, laughter, cousins, and family memories, a place where he had grown up, played freely, and moved around with the innocent confidence of a child who feels safe in the world.

It was an environment he knew by heart, one where danger had never lived, one where nothing like this had ever happened before, and that is perhaps what makes the memory so unbearably painful.

That day, something was different, something that should never have been there was there, a pan with grease placed on the floor, an ordinary object turned into a silent threat.

It was a detail so small and so unexpected that no one noticed it in time, because on every other day, in every other moment, that pan would never have been on the ground.
But on that day, it was.
And in a single tragic instant, Luquinhas fell backward into it.

There was very little grease in the pan, almost nothing at all, but it was enough, more than enough, to change everything in the blink of an eye.

That small amount was enough to burn forty percent of his tiny body, enough to cause injuries that no child should ever have to endure, enough to leave scars not only on his skin but deep inside our hearts.

His little arms and hands were the most affected, because instinctively, innocently, he tried to support himself as he fell, his body reacting faster than thought, faster than fear.

His back suffered severe burns, as did his sweet little face, the face we kiss goodnight, the face that smiles when he wakes up, the face that carries his entire world.
His head and neck were also badly burned, areas so delicate and vulnerable that even thinking about it makes my chest tighten and my breath falter.

It was an indescribable nightmare, the kind of horror that words fail to capture, the kind that lives on in flashes behind closed eyes and refuses to let you sleep.
When I found my son, I lost all my strength in that moment, as if my body simply gave up under the weight of what I was seeing, as if my soul had been ripped open.
I felt my world collapse entirely, piece by piece, because nothing prepares a parent for the sight of their child in pain like that.

He was already being helped by an aunt who had pulled him out of the pan, acting with courage and desperation, doing the only thing she could in those terrifying seconds.

Shortly after, a firefighter also helped us, lifting Luquinhas into his arms and carrying him to the hospital, holding him as gently as if he were holding the most fragile thing on earth.
From that moment on, time stopped making sense.

Since that day, we have been living one day at a time, sometimes one hour at a time, sometimes one minute at a time, learning how to breathe again in a world that suddenly feels unfamiliar.
Each day we spend here in the ICU is a victory, a quiet triumph that may not look like much from the outside, but means everything to us.
Luquinhas is incredibly strong, stronger than anyone could ever imagine, and even on the days that are heavier, darker, and more painful, he continues to fight.

There are days when the fear feels unbearable, when the exhaustion seeps into our bones, and when hope feels fragile, like glass.
But God has been strengthening us day after day, lifting us when we feel we cannot stand anymore, reminding us that we are not alone in this battle.
Today, he is much better than he was on the first day we saw him here, and even writing those words feels like a miracle.

That first moment was devastating and desperate, a memory that still makes my hands shake and my heart race.
Seeing him then was like having the air ripped from my lungs, like standing at the edge of an abyss with no idea how to survive the fall.
Now, after two long weeks, we feel more positive, more confident, and cautiously hopeful about his recovery.

He is healing very well, step by step, in his own time, surrounded by care, science, and compassion.
He is being looked after by an incredible team of professionals, technicians, nurses, doctors, physiotherapists, psychologists, and surgeons who treat him not just as a patient, but as a precious life.
Every single person involved in his care has become part of our story, part of our gratitude, part of our prayers.

We were able to secure a place in a public hospital that is a reference for severe burn cases here in Belo Horizonte, something that felt impossible at first but became reality at the exact moment we needed it most.

Everything, absolutely everything, was prepared by God, in ways we could never have planned or understood on our own.
Luquinhas has already undergone a skin graft on his little arm, and thank God, everything went well, a small but powerful victory that filled our hearts with relief and tears.

He will still need to go through other surgeries, other difficult moments, and other days that will test our strength.
But we are confident, deeply confident, that we will continue to experience victory after victory, guided by faith and love.
God, in His infinite goodness, has given us strength when we had none left, and has shown His presence in every single second of this journey.

He has been there in the hands of the doctors, in the quiet moments of progress, in the unexpected signs of hope, and in the love sent by people near and far.
Once again, from the depths of our hearts, I want to thank everyone for the prayers, the messages of support, and the positive energy that have been sent our way.

Every word, every thought, every prayer has reached us, has held us up, and has helped carry Luquinhas forward.
And we will keep believing, keep hoping, and keep trusting that this story, though born from pain, will continue to move toward healing, light, and life.