Parents forced to pull plug on daughter after sleepover horror

In the quiet suburbs of Melbourne, where the routine of school sports and weekend sleepovers usually forms the backdrop of a safe childhood, a family is grappling with a void that no amount of time will ever fill. As a journalist who has covered a decade of human tragedy and triumph, I have seen many parents at their breaking point. But sitting across from Andrea and Paul Haynes, one doesnโ€™t just see grief; you see the tectonic plates of a familyโ€™s reality shifting in the wake of a โ€œviral trendโ€ that sounds more like a playground game than a death sentence.

The story of 13-year-old Esra Haynes is a haunting cautionary tale for the digital ageโ€”a narrative that left even seasoned A Current Affair host Ally Langdon, herself a mother of two, visibly shaken and struggling to maintain the professional composure that a decade in the anchor chair usually demands.

The Girl Who Had Everything to Live For
To understand the magnitude of this loss, one must first look at the life that was extinguished. Esra was not a child on the margins; she was at the very heart of her community. A co-captain at the Montrose Football Netball Club, she was described by her peers as โ€œdetermined, fun, cheeky, and talented.โ€ She was a fierce competitor, a young athlete who raced BMX bikes alongside her brothers and led her team to a national aerobics championship in Queensland.

On March 31, Esra did what any typical Year 8 student would do: she went to a friendโ€™s house for a sleepover. Her parents had no reason to worry. โ€œIt was just the regular routine of going to hang out with her mates,โ€ Andrea Haynes told Langdon, her voice heavy with the memory of that final, ordinary goodbye.

โ€œWe always knew where she was and we knew who she was with,โ€ Paul Haynes added. โ€œIt wasnโ€™t anything out of the ordinary.โ€

But the โ€œordinaryโ€ was shattered by a phone call that is every parentโ€™s living pulse of terror. The message was brief and chilling: โ€œCome and get your daughter.โ€

โ€œChromingโ€: A Lethal High Hiding in Plain Sight
What the Haynes family didnโ€™t knowโ€”and what many parents remain dangerously ignorant ofโ€”is the rise of โ€œchroming.โ€ It is a contemporary term for a deadly old practice: huffing or inhaling toxic volatile substances to achieve a fleeting high. The โ€œtrend,โ€ amplified by social media algorithms, involves sniffing common household items like paint, permanent markers, or, in Esraโ€™s case, a simple can of aerosol deodorant.

At the sleepover, Esra inhaled the chemicals and immediately went into cardiac arrest. Her friends, children themselves, initially thought she was having a panic attack. They didnโ€™t realize that her body was systematically shutting down. By the time Andrea arrived at the scene, paramedics were desperately trying to restart her daughterโ€™s heart. It was in that frantic, clinical chaos that the word โ€œchromingโ€ was first uttered to herโ€”a term she had never heard until the moment it claimed her child.

Eight Days of Hope, a Lifetime of Loss
For eight agonizing days, Esra was kept on life support. Her parents clung to the hope that her athletic backgroundโ€”her strong heart and resilient lungsโ€”would pull her back from the brink. But the chemical assault had been too severe. The brain damage was deemed โ€œirreparable.โ€

Paul and Andrea were then forced into the most unnatural position a parent can occupy: deciding when the life they had given to their daughter thirteen years prior would officially end.

โ€œIt was a very, very difficult thing to do to such a young soul,โ€ Paul recounted, reliving the trauma of their final moments in the hospital. โ€œShe was put onto a bed so we could lay with her. We cuddled her until the end.โ€

Watching this interview, Ally Langdonโ€™s eyes filled with tearsโ€”a rare moment of raw, unscripted empathy that mirrored the reaction of a shocked nation. It wasnโ€™t just a news segment; it was a communal mourning for a girl who died seeking a thrill she didnโ€™t know could kill her.

A Crusade Born of โ€œShatteredโ€ Lives
The aftermath has left the Haynes household โ€œbroken.โ€ Esraโ€™s siblingsโ€”Imogen, Seth, and Charlieโ€”are described as โ€œshattered.โ€ The family hasnโ€™t been sleeping or eating; the vibrant home has been silenced.

However, out of this devastation, Paul and Andrea have launched a crusade. They are demanding better education, not just for children, but for the parents who are the first line of defense.

โ€œIf we were educated and the word had been put out there, we would have had the discussion around our kitchen table for sure,โ€ Paul said. He is calling for a โ€œramp-upโ€ of information, ensuring kids hear the clinical, terrifying truth about organ failure and โ€œsudden sniffing deathโ€ from authority figures rather than distorted versions from social media.

The Path Forward: Education as a Life-Saving Tool
Since 2009, chroming has been linked to numerous deaths across Australia and globally. The chemicals involved can cause:

Cardiac Arrest: Instant heart failure due to chemical sensitivity.

Asphyxiation: Displacing oxygen in the lungs.

Organ Failure: Permanent damage to the liver, kidneys, and brain.

Sudden Sniffing Death Syndrome: A fatal syndrome that can occur even on the very first try.

Paul Haynesโ€™ message is clear: โ€œParents need to sit and have a chat to their children, and just open that conversation up gently with them.โ€

The Haynes family will forever carry the โ€œpictures in their mindโ€ of the night their world endedโ€”the image of their daughter confronted by a chemical predator disguised as a household staple. By sharing their story, they hope to ensure that no other parent has to receive that late-night call, and no other community has to lose a โ€œcheeky, talentedโ€ star to a viral craze.


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