EPISODE 19 - Uprooting and rerouting with camilla cook

Our guest, Camilla Cook, a white women blonde hair tied back, a fringe, gold hooped earings and a bright yellow and teal top smiles at the camera and is framed by a bright pink boarder. The episode title is bottom right in yellow: ‘Episode 19: Uprooting and rerouting with Camilla Cook’.

In this episode, Lauren and Rina talk with teacher and mum Camilla Cook on how she left her home, job and life behind her during the COVID pandemic at the same time as coming to terms with the fact that her youngest daughter Sylva, had a yet undiagnosed genetic condition. Camilla shares her story of leaving Tanzania (where she lived and taught) pregnant with Sylva, with her husband and 3 year old in tow not realising they would not be going back. Camilla had a lot of help and support from her family and loved ones and acknowledges the privileged position she was and is in relative to others, but still it was very difficult contending with so many changes at once at the same time as processing her daughter’s condition. Camilla likens it to an Eddie Izzard joke about ‘Etch A Sketch’, where it was as if everything was shook away and cancelled and they had to start again. Now living in Brighton, they still don’t have a diagnosis for Sylva, but they have drawn a new picture and are very much enjoying how it looks.  

Content Warnings

COVID 19 Pandemic

Seeking diagnosis

Amniocentesis 

Guest Biography

Camilla Cook is an English teacher from Brighton. Her husband Will Kerr is a copywriter (and secretly brilliant poet), and they have two children: Freddy who is six, and Sylva who is two. As a family they spend lots of time on the beach, exploring the woods, and dancing to Kate Bush. Camilla has taught all over the world, starting in North London, then El Salvador, before returning to Hackney to help set up a charity called the Literacy Pirates. She convinced Will to move to Thailand with her, and they had Freddy in Chiang Mai. Then they all moved to Tanzania, before coming back to settle in good old Sussex by the sea. Sylva either has an undiagnosed genetic condition, or is a magical pixie sent to us humans by the forest folk, and is the subject of our conversation in this episode.

Resources

SWAN UK - ‘syndromes without a name’ supporting those without a diagnosis

Camilla’s blog can be found here.


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EPISODE 20 - ‘I am because we are’ with juliet diener

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EPISODE 18 - working 9 to 5 with Leisa millar