ALTADENA, Calif. — Missi Dowd-Figueroa brought life back to the fire-ravaged plot where her home once stood -- one sunflower at a time.
The registered nurse and mother of three lost her 1898 farm-style house in the Eaton Fire, one of two deadly wildfires that tore through the Los Angeles area last January, obliterating entire neighborhoods and displacing tens of thousands of people.
A year later, many are still grappling with grief and sorrow. Few have been able to rebuild so far, and the rest face no shortage of challenges.
''The Altadena I know and love is gone,'' Dowd-Figueroa said, referring to the suburb devastated by the fire. ''Everything burned down — my dentist, my pharmacy — all of it's gone. But there's still something about Altadena that feels like Altadena now, even though there are no homes.''
She's among those who decided to stay. Her process of healing started with tiny seeds that gave her hope and eventually turned her barren property into a flourishing garden.
Dowd-Figueroa and her family had lived in the four-bedroom, three-bath house for 10 years. It was the longest she'd ever lived in one place, and the sense of loss left her stricken by waves of sadness.
For months, she would drive to the empty lot and cry. Her grief and shock deepened when she realized that, in addition to her late grandmother's artwork that was in her home, her father's ashes were gone forever.
''I spent several days digging through the ashes just looking for his little urn, and I never found it,'' said Dowd-Figueroa, 44.