Stanford University epidemiology professor Dr. Alice Howland is living her best life—she’s a respected academic, loving mom, and has a pretty sweet gig teaching at Columbia. But then, bam, she starts forgetting stuff. Not just where she left her keys, but, like, actual words mid-sentence. Turns out, it’s early-onset Alzheimer’s, which, let’s be real, is just brutal. The story follows her as she fights to hang onto her memories while the disease chips away at who she is. Her family’s got their own drama—they’re scared, frustrated, sometimes totally clueless about how to help. As Alice’s world gets smaller and foggier, she’s desperate to hold onto what makes her, well, Alice. It’s raw, it’s honest, and it doesn’t sugarcoat how rough things get. Basically, it’s about identity, love, and trying to find yourself even when your mind is slipping away.