Performative Writer
When I first get to a city, particularly one I’m fond of, I’m always itching to get out and walk. Not looking for anything specific, but just to let the city paint me. Let it leave its mark, in whatever way it would like.
When I first get to a city, particularly one I’m fond of, I’m always itching to get out and walk. Not looking for anything specific, but just to let the city paint me. Let it leave its mark, in whatever way it would like.
It is so important to disconnect and just be with yourself. You wake up, and there's immediate noise. For a long time, I was always afraid of being away from the noise. I didn't want to be in my own silence. So I would always go
Egypt is full of contrasts. What feels like a concrete truth on one street can be worlds away from what others are living just a few blocks over. Luxor is no different. With older Brits and Europeans alike walking around with their eclectic scarves and hats - always equipped with
Late nights followed by early mornings. Leaving just as I begin to settle in. Throwing myself, again and again, into the complete unknown and absorbing the shock head-on. That has been the shape of my life for the past four years. I hadn't left my home country until
This place is a contradiction, an anomaly. Full of warmth and generosity, and also something harder to read. I landed in Egypt on a red-eye flight with my guard up and half asleep at 6 AM. My bags were opened. Questions were asked. Then more questions. Eventually, I was waved