Amber Hayward's kids weren't sold when she started speaking Lushootseed at home. It sounded different and some of the words were hard to say.

But Hayward kept at it. She made her bathroom, where she gets ready, an English-free zone. From there she hollered at her kids in Lushootseed to guide them through their morning routine: Brush your teeth, get dressed, wash your face. And in time, her kids got on board.

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It's a process, but Hayward wants to help preserve Lushootseed, a language once spoken by nearly 12,000 people, that's now in peril of dying out altogether.

She wants her kids and their children to have a language that was stolen from previous generations when they were sent to Indian Boarding Schools.