My dad is Kenyan and I’d never been to his home country to meet that side of my family before. So my mum decided to take me and my sister out of school – when I was six, going on seven – and go on a big adventure. In England, I was just sitting in a classroom practising my handwriting. Scribing a line of the same letters over and over again. I liked school, but I wasn’t invested in the writing side of things, so going to Kenya at that age, my mum thought, would encourage me to be much more open to exploring.
This was my first time on a plane, so I remember it all so clearly. We got on the flight – it was overnight, quite a long one – and were all handed blankets. The air hostess gave me this really cool deck of cards. I’ve still got them today at my mum’s house; they all had different kinds of illustrated African figures on the back. I remember when we landed that we had to transfer through a bunch of smaller airports. At that age, I was really into wildlife, and I remember being fascinated at the number of lizards in the gardens outside of the airports in Africa, and trying to catch them.