Inclusivity, Creativity and Words that Liberate Us with Huma Qureshi
Huma is a writer, a journalist and an award-winning author, and she writes about the extraordinary joy and beauty that can be found in ordinary little things, creating a home, navigating motherhood, and living simply and purposefully.In this episode, we talked about her love for the written word, how her south Asian heritage has influenced her as a person and as a writer as well, learning to say no and navigating writing, life, and motherhood all at the same time.Huma and I share the same cultural heritage as we are both from Pakistan. I grew up in Pakistan and she didn't but still, our experiences are quite the same in many ways. We also talked about inclusion, why representation matters and why we need to hear, see and read more stories in which we can see ourselves reflected to create space for what's possible for us.Here's what we talk about in this episode:how it all begun and what influenced her desire to writejournalism and moving on to writing for herselfmotherhood and the struggle with self-doubtbecoming a freelance writerdeveloping reading as a habithow having an Asian heritage has influenced her as a person and as a writer while living far from the culture itselfInclusion: we need more stories we can relate to because representation mattersinclusivity in the book publishing world, the media publishing world and also on the micro levels of blogs, Instagram and social mediawhy do we need to hear and share those stories really?expectations from girls who grow up in Asian culture and how it can feel heavySouth Asian culture and marriagesher personal story of looking for examples when she fell in love with an Englishmanhow did Huma allowed herself to not let those societal and cultural pressures decide how she chooses to show up in the worldthe struggles of finding a balance between motherhood and her love for writinglearning to say nohow her blog came to bethe failures along the wayfinding her way back to her writingwhy she writeswhat does her day to day creative process look liketeaching writing courses onlinenot seeing herself as being the expertFind links to the resources we discuss in the full show notes.Huma's website and InstagramHira's website and Instagram