I have been writing since I was 10 years old, encouraged by my paternal grandfather, Tomas Bravo Castillo, who, as the founder of an educational project inspired by the work of Gabriela Mistral, valued the work and legacy of our local poet throughout his life. My journey with him, as his granddaughter and as a student in his classroom, not only helped me understand the movement between words, emotions, and that ethereal space of poetry at a young age, but also laid the foundation for me to now understand the movement between languages, countries, disciplines, and identities. Through him, I discovered a love for literature, books, recitation, and cultural life that continues to shape my work today. That is why in my work I seek to preserve what distinguishes me, without softening it to fit in. I am particularly interested in hybrid forms because they reflect my lived experience, both as an individual and as a citizen of the world: fragmented but coherent, uncertain but intentional. Ultimately, I hope that my writing opens up spaces for reflection, dialogue, recognition, and connection, especially for those who inhabit between worlds, providing an atmosphere of rest and vulnerability that calls for tenderness without asking for anything in return.