Six-year-old children living in the early 2000s had thoughts of only a handful of things: which Pokémon card was the coolest, how they could trick their parents into buying candy at the grocery store, learning hand-eye coordination while playing video games, and reciting the theme song to their favorite Saturday morning cartoon show.
No one that young was thinking about what they wanted to do when they became an adult. Those children weren't thinking about the next move upon high school graduation. It was about all flashing items and doing the opposite of what their parents said.
But Tyler Huff was different. He knew what his plan was. It was in his blood. It was the same one his father had. And grandparents, too. Even Huff's older brother had a similar destination.







