"Exactly," Papa Joe said. "The heat doesn't destroy you. It loosens you. The sweat pushes out the toxins. The pressure forces you to slow down, to sit still, to breathe deep. If you run out of the sauna too fast, you get dizzy and fall. But if you stay... you emerge stronger, cleaner, and softer."

Frustrated, she called her grandfather, Papa Joe. He lived in the countryside where the Coco Rains were even worse.

Three weeks later, the Coco Rains stopped. The sun came out. But something had changed. Coco walked out of her apartment not as the stressed girl who wanted to quit, but as a woman who knew her own strength. coco rains – the sauna is heating up

" Good? " Coco was shocked.

"Coco," he said slowly. "What happens in a sauna?" "Exactly," Papa Joe said

She was silent.

"Yes. But what else? When the stones get hot and the water hits them... what happens to your muscles?" The sweat pushes out the toxins

Coco had always loved the rain. The gentle pitter-patter on her tin roof was her favorite lullaby. But this wasn't a gentle rain. This was Coco Rains — a thick, humid, relentless downpour that turned the air into a wet blanket.