TAKING pictures of your little one is a key part of them growing up.
It charts special moments, but for one family, it revealed a terrifying illness in their daughter.
Rachel Mayta seemed perfectly healthy until she was 18 months old and a doctor spotted something strange in her eye.
He asked her parents for pictures of her and saw a sure sign that something was amiss.
Her right eye appeared to be emitting a glow in the image – a key sign of cancer or eye disease.
In October 1991, Rachel, now 32, was diagnosed with retinoblastoma.
Read more on eye cancer
This is a cancer that is found in the retina and most commonly affects young children.
Doctors explained there was no chance of saving the eye and it had to be removed urgently to prevent the illness spreading.
Four days later, the youngster had the eyeball removed and luckily, she says she doesn’t remember much of her journey.
Now Rachel is raising awareness of the condition and has even grown the confidence to experiment with different prosthetics.
She was fitted with her first prosthetic when she was 20-months-old and recalls not being massively affected by having just one eye and always wore a prosthetic.
However children nicknamed her “Cyclopes” as a result.
But it wasn’t until her mid-20s that she suffered any self-confidence issues, after having a surgery designed to replace the implant holding her prosthetic in place.
Rachel, who lives in Portland, Oregon, US said after surgery and the healing process, her eye lost most of its ability to blink.
“A surgery where I had expected the outcome to result in more mobility of the eye and a more realistic looking prosthetic became the exact opposite.
“Prior to this surgery most people wouldn’t have even noticed my eye, but afterwards it was very apparent.
“I was very aware of the people looking at me, I had people say mean things and talk to me differently”, she told NeedToKnow.
The hairstylist said she had previously been seeing a guy, who after a few dates told her that her eye freaked him out and that he wouldn’t be able to see passed it.
She added: “I was so unhappy with how I looked that I really didn’t do much outside of the home for almost a year.
“And then one day it hit me: I am who I am. I made the active choice to stop saying mean things to myself and only allow myself to feed my brain positivity and tell myself good things.”
She has now gained a newfound confidence and has decided to explore different options – and has become creative.
She said: “I am so grateful that I found my occultist Christina King at the Center for Ocular Prosthetics in Portland – she is incredible.