Romer, heading up one of the world's most valuable female-founded startups and a mother of two, had suffered a stroke at 34 years old.
The right side of Romer's body was immobilized, but her mind was running at full speed. She lived in a close-knit neighborhood with family nearby; her ex-husband was next door with their twin girls but too far away to hear her soft cries for help. "I decided at some point to try to save some energy because I could tell I wasn't projecting much noise," she says.
Romer had one hope: She knew her aunt walked her dog past the house most mornings. She closed her eyes and waited for dawn.
She awoke to the sound of birds chirping and to her aunt, out for her morning walk earlier than usual. As a nurse, her aunt immediately recognized the signs of a stroke. "She was shocked that I was talking," Romer says.
Paramedics rushed Romer to the hospital, where she would spend the next three months.
The stroke and ongoing recovery reshaped Romer's life-and the future of her company. Guild had always tried to develop a path forward for American workers, but Romer's ordeal forced her and her team to contend with the startup's own future and gave them new insight into the challenges they've been reckoning with all along.
This story is from the June - July 2024 edition of Fortune US.
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This story is from the June - July 2024 edition of Fortune US.
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