Babes, how did you get here
Two Canadian kids land in Jamaica at 8 and 9 years old. No choice. No warning. No idea what was coming. Ten years later, they're still here — navigating identity, belonging, and what it means to grow up between worlds. Alexandra and Scarlett moved to Jamaica from Montreal in 2015. One day they were eating dumplings in Canada, the next they were the only white kids at Mona Prep, getting swarmed by classmates who wanted to touch their hair. They went from closed Canadian school buildings to open air classrooms with grills and shutters. From musical theatre and soccer to Junior School Challenge Quiz and memorizing Jamaican proverbs at 6:45 AM. From being tourists at all inclusives to representing Jamaica internationally in equestrian competitions. Now 19 and 17, they've built entire lives here. Alexandra teaches piano, stage manages productions, and is launching her own children's performing arts camp. Scarlett rides horses competitively and wears the Jamaican flag abroad — even though she's not technically Jamaican. But the question remains: where do they actually belong? In this honest and surprisingly funny conversation, they talk about what it's really like to grow up in a country you didn't choose, build a career in a place with fewer competitors, and navigate identity when you're not quite Canadian anymore but not fully Jamaican either. ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ 🔥 What we cover: Moving to Jamaica at 8 and 9 with no real explanation Being the first white kids many classmates had ever seen The culture shock of open air schools and touching hair Junior School Challenge Quiz and memorizing Jamaican history at 6 AM Learning patois proverbs and current affairs to compete Representing Jamaica internationally in equestrian sports Teaching piano in Jamaica vs competing in Canada Why it's easier to build a creative career here The trauma of finding maggots in a school patty Juicy vs Tasty patty debate (and why one of them will never eat patties) Curry goat vs oxtail (it's about price and consistency) Sorrel vs eggnog at Christmas What they miss about Canada (dumplings and musical theatre) What they'll miss about Jamaica when they leave Growing up between cultures and not fully belonging to either Where home actually is after 10 years abroad ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ ⚠️ REAL TALK: This episode is about what happens when kids don't get a choice. It's about adapting, surviving, and eventually thriving in a place that wasn't part of the plan. It's about building identity when you're caught between two worlds, and realizing that "home" might not be a place at all. Whether you moved as a kid, raised third culture kids, or have ever felt like you don't fully belong anywhere — this conversation will make you laugh, think, and maybe reconsider what it really means to call a place home. ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ 💬 TELL US IN THE COMMENTS: Did you move countries as a kid? Do you think kids adapt easier than adults? Where do you actually feel like you belong? Drop your thoughts below 👇 We read every single one. 🔁 Share this with someone who grew up between cultures. ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ 🎧 About the show — \"Babes, How Did You Get Here?\" Hosted by entrepreneur & former Miss Jamaica April Jackson, this podcast explores the raw, emotional, and often uncomfortable stories behind people who chose a life elsewhere. New episodes every week from around the world. ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ ⏱️ CHAPTERS: #Jamaica #Canada #ThirdCultureKids #ExpatLife #MovingAbroad #GrowingUpAbroad #MonaPrep #JamaicanIdentity #CanadianExpats #Kingston #LifeInJamaica #CulturalIdentity #BelongingNowhere #Podcast #AprilJackson #BabesHowDidYouGetHere #RaisingKidsAbroad #ExpatKids #JamaicaLife #IdentityCrisis #BetweenWorlds #HomeIsWhereYouMakeIt #PerformingArts #EquestrianLife #ModernMigration
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