Paula Langa is a baker. She learned young, standing beside her mother in their kitchen in Romania, making cakes for neighbours’ birthdays and family celebrations. “When I was younger, me and my mama used to bake cakes for people,” she says. “I learned from her. I liked it, so I keep doing it.”
These days, living in Newport with her two young children, Paula bakes constantly. “I do croissants, chocolate croissants. I do cheesecake, Kinder cheesecake, Raffaello cake. I do a lot of types of pancakes.” Her five-year-old daughter and two-year-old son get through a lot of cake.
“The kids love sweets and chocolate, so I make them. I just watch recipes on my phone and try them. And then I see, oh, I’m good at that, and I try it again.”
Struggling to see
The problem was seeing those recipes. Paula finds them on her phone, but the text is always tiny. For years, she’d have to hold the screen right up to her face, squinting at ingredients and method steps until her eyes ached. “You need to be really close to the phone,” she says. “They write it in very small text.”
She’d been getting severe headaches for five years. Her eyes would water constantly, blink uncontrollably when she tried to focus on a screen. “My eyes were stressed all the time,” she says. “When I’m looking at something very intensely, my eyes start watering, it’s like I’m crying for nothing. And sometimes when I have a big headache, I see double.”
She knew something was wrong, but she’d never had her eyes tested.