author
My Journey as a Writer
I’ve always been a storyteller.
Long before I called myself a writer, I was an avid reader, an observer, and a devoted journal keeper. Throughout my childhood and adult life, I filled notebooks with thoughts, memories and reflections, trying to make sense of the many places I had called home and the people I had met along the way. Writing became the thread that connected the different chapters of my life.
For many years, those words remained private.
It wasn’t until my four children became more independent that I finally gave myself permission to write publicly. I started a blog, Wandering Identity, as a way of capturing my experiences of growing up across cultures and living a life between places. I wrote about identity, belonging, travel, family, and the emotional landscape of global mobility, never imagining that those deeply personal reflections would resonate with readers around the world.
My Audience
As my readership grew, so did the encouragement to tell my story more fully.
At first, I thought I was writing a book for my children—a way of helping them understand the generations of movement that had shaped our family and perhaps, one day, themselves. But somewhere during the writing process, I realised I wasn’t only writing for them.
I was writing for the little girl I had once been.
For the woman I was still becoming.
And for everyone who had ever struggled to find the words for the complicated emotions of living between cultures, carrying multiple identities, or wondering where they truly belonged.
As my readership grew, so did the encouragement to tell my story more fully.
At first, I thought I was writing a book for my children—a way of helping them understand the generations of movement that had shaped our family and perhaps, one day, themselves. But somewhere during the writing process, I realised I wasn’t only writing for them.
I was writing for the little girl I had once been.
For the woman I was still becoming.
And for everyone who had ever struggled to find the words for the complicated emotions of living between cultures, carrying multiple identities, or wondering where they truly belonged.
Author of Beneath A Borrowed Sky – One woman’s search for the true meaning of home
“A book that those who have grown up – or lived as adults – among many cultures will find emotionally moving and deeply thought-provoking.”
Writing Beneath A Borrowed Sky became an act of discovery as much as storytelling. It was a slow and deliberate process. I committed myself to writing one thousand words each day, trusting that consistency would eventually become a manuscript. Some days those words flowed effortlessly; on others they arrived reluctantly. But I showed up every day because I believed the story deserved to be told.
Support and Inspiration
Like every writer, I didn’t make the journey alone.
I have been incredibly fortunate to learn from people who have generously shared their wisdom and believed in my work. My mentor, Anna Fox, was the first person to tell me that my story mattered and encouraged me to write it. She helped me find confidence in my own voice before I fully trusted it myself.
As the manuscript evolved, I was privileged to work with my editors, Jo Parfitt and Susan Boyd, whose thoughtful guidance challenged me to write more honestly, more clearly and with greater emotional depth. Their experience, insight and unwavering support helped shape not only my memoir but also the writer I have become.
Along the way, I found inspiration in writers whose work gave language to experiences that had long felt difficult to explain. Ruth E. Van Reken‘s writing on Third Culture Kids, Pico Iyer‘s reflections on global living, Kristin Louise Duncombe‘s memoir, and Miriam Ottimofiore‘s beautifully observed stories all reminded me that our lives between places deserve to be written about.
Looking ahead
Today, I continue to write because I believe stories help us understand ourselves and one another. They build bridges across cultures, generations and experiences. They remind us that, although our journeys are unique, the emotions that shape them are often shared.
I’m delighted that my writing journey is only just beginning.
Alongside my newsletter, essays and speaking engagements, I’m now researching and writing my second book—a work of historical fiction inspired by my mother’s family. Set against the backdrop of the Franco regime and the Second World War in Gibraltar, Spain and Portugal, it weaves together family history, memory and imagination to explore another generation’s search for identity, resilience and home.
Looking back, I realise that every journal entry, every blog post and every page of Beneath A Borrowed Sky has been leading me here.
To a life shaped by stories.
And to the privilege of sharing them.
Wanna hear my stories?
THE BLOG
In this blog I will attempt to convey the joys and the trials and tribulations of being a global nomad, by writing short stories or more like snippets in time from my past, experiences I’ve had during my travels, stories about my international family and their colorful and interesting history.
The Comfort of A Tidy Home
There is a particular kind of comfort in a tidy home. Not the kind that impresses guests or photographs well, but the quiet, almost invisible kind —...
On Legitimacy (And Learning to Drive Again at 54)
Right now, I’m going through a quiet kind of existential crisis. Not the dramatic, life-falling-apart kind. The slower, more insidious kind. The...
The slow unlearning of people-pleasing
I didn’t become a people-pleaser because I was weak. I became one because I was paying attention. When you grow up across borders, you learn early...
Sickness and Blackouts
(Lubumbashi, DRC – 1976) I kept on dozing on and off. When I woke up, we were being thrashed around in the back of a large jeep. Daddy was steadying...
Gum balls and Plane rides
(Democratic Republic of Congo formerly known as Zaire - 1976) We had been playing with some bright coloured bubble gum balls that Mummy had brought...
The March 11th Earthquake in Japan
In memory of the many lives lost on the March 11th 2011 tsunami in Japan.We were living in Tokyo at the time, 200kms south of the quake’s...
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