Jami
Jami Amo, 34, is shown in portrait at her home in Willow Grove, Pa. Amo was a 15-year-old student at Columbine High School when the 1999 shootings occurred in Colorado. Now, married 7 years, and a full-time mother of three, she still experiences PTSD from that fateful day with insomnia, nightmares, anxiety and flashbacks, to name a few. With the recent shooing in Parkland, Fla. those thoughts have replayed and Amo is fed up that nothing has changed. To combat, Amo is taking action joining and participating in Everytown Survivor Network and Moms Demand Action for Gun Sense in America. "It's a lot of shock too sometimes it doesn't feel real even 19 years later because who ever thought this is where we would be as a country. It didn't start with us, but it took off with us, it changed a lot, obviously for us, but the country as a whole. It's hard to sit back and think that we're still doing this – and that's really probably the worst part... It's the same, it just gets worse and worse. Vegas, Orlando, San Bernadino, it's not just in schools, it's everywhere. It's hard to watch and do nothing, which is why I'm not doing nothing anymore. I'm gonna do whatever it takes." (Corey Perrine for Vox)