Daria already knows how this will go.
Four days at the Lake Bonney camp. No phones. No leaving. Stuck with people she doesn't trust, doing activities that don't matter. Fishing. Kayaking. Environmental work.
Just something to get through.
At FLO, she's learned the system. Show up. Stay quiet. Don't expect anything to change.
But the camp doesn't unfold the way she expects.
Out on the lake, and along its edges, things begin to shift. Not through big moments or forced lessons, but through doing. Watching. Noticing. The way water moves. The way systems connect. The way small actions carry further than they should.
It's not dramatic. It's not instant. But it's enough.
Back in the classroom, the feeling doesn't disappear. It follows her. Builds. An idea begins to take shape, unfinished, uncertain, but hers.
Daria and the Idea: book one: the camp is a South Australian story about alternative education, quiet resilience, and the power of practical learning to spark change.
This is not a story about transformation.
It's about the moment before it.
The moment you stop opting out.