She kept her brain occupied
by reading a good book. When she didn’t feel like reading, she would jam out on her ukulele or put on music. On Monday’s and Thursday's, and an occasional Saturday, you would find her dancing the night away with her dance team. Even though her dance team was practically her second family, it was hard work. She would always say that in the end, it was truly worth it. When she would hang out with her family, you would find her often watching a movie or a television show, when she was with her brothers, she would often play video games.
You could say Kayla liked school. If people chose a subject that suited her, it’d be English. She loved literature with all her heart, and found it very fascinating. One of her favorite parts of English class was the reading. She loved all the stories that were told, and in a sense you could say she had always been apart of a the fictional world. She was good at many things, but she hated math because it never came easy to her. She would often get frustrated with an assignment if she didn’t understand it, but in the end, she would always persevere.
She always believed she could achieve her goals. She had always wanted to go to Utah State in Logan. I still can remember her saying one of her goals was to get a degree in sociology or psychology. The reason she wanted to pursue this topic is simply because she had always been fascinated with how the human brain function in that sort of matter. She did have much simpler goals, like how she would stick with dancing until she graduated. She would go on about how much time and effort she put into it, and you could see how much passion she had for it. Her overall goal was to work as a Homicide Detective or become apart of the Behavior Analysis Unit.
If she could speak right now, she would say that she wants to be remembered as a person who was down to Earth. She would want to be remembered as someone who truly cared about things and how she wanted to change how society runs. She would want to be remembered as herself, and not how other people perceived her.