Annica Trotter, 26, has two children and the kind of drive you wouldn't want to bet against.
She lost her job in October 2010, shortly after her son was born and landed a new job five months later.
Trotter is now working as a receptionist for a security company, checking people's security credentials.
"I'm so glad to have work to look forward to again," Trotter says after learning she'd been hired.
She started working a second job, as a valet host at a local casino to further help make ends meet, and is now working nearly 60 hours a week. Trotter had to take on a second job after she and the father of her children broke up and she had to find a way to support the household on her own.
Trotter has been working since she was a teenager. Her first job was at a "chicken shack," she says. A series of other restaurant and retail jobs followed.
"I'd say I've had about 14 jobs," she says.
Trotter checked herself into foster care when she was 15 after her grandmother, who was also her legal guardian, passed away.
"I found out who my caseworker was," Trotter says. "I caught the bus and I said, 'I need your help.'"
She remained in the foster care system until the age of 21.
Totter is also trying to build a baking business. She makes cakes, cupcakes, pies and other treats, though with her other jobs she hasn't had much time to find customers. She's calling her business The Bright Oven.
Audio Diary
The six people in our series The Road Back To Work are chronicling the ups and downs of their job searches by keeping audio diaries this year. Updates will be posted here regularly.
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