I’m now officially a Very Interesting Blogger 🎉

Well, here’s something new: I’m officially a Very Interesting Blogger – part of Judith Peters’ inspiring blogging programme. Which means… there’s (hopefully!) going to be a bit more life on this blog than usual.

If you’ve been around a while, you might remember that my first parenting blog, What Mummy Didn’t Know, began as a place to share the hard stuff. Becoming a mother at 40, after years of living and breathing my career in academia, was a seismic shift. I went from being a full-time English lecturer and teacher trainer, totally passionate about my work and identity, to being at home on parental leave, with a screaming baby and a head full of questions and overwhelm.

It hit me hard. And writing about it helped.

Over time, I found a new kind of rhythm. These days, I’m back to full-time work, now navigating life as a working bilingual mum with all its ups and downs – and I still use that space to reflect, share and connect. For example, in this post about my “Working Mum Routine”.

But something else happened along the way. Mixed into those early blog posts were a few thoughts on how we’re raising our daughter bilingually. I mean, as a language nerd who’s lived in Germany for years, it was always clear to me that we’d raise her with both English and German. What wasn’t clear was just how fascinating – and at times utterly overwhelming – this process can be when you step outside the theory and start living it with your own child!

That’s when the questions started coming in. Friends, colleagues, readers began asking: “How do you actually do bilingual parenting?” And so The MAASter Plan was born – my little corner of the internet where I now work self-employed as a bilingual parenting coach for multilingual and international families.

So why join a blogging programme now?

Because blogging has always been my space to think aloud. To reflect on the gap between what I know from years of studying psychology, linguistics and education, and how those ideas actually hold up in the chaos of real life.

But also? Because it’s fun to be part of something bigger.

Judith has set herself the wonderfully bold goal of becoming a blog-millionaire – and every blog post her Very Interesting Bloggers (VIBs) write adds to that mission. So by joining the programme, not only do I get inspired and nudged to write more, but every post I publish actually counts towards something massive! I love the thought of being a tiny piece in that much bigger picture. And who knows, maybe my words will reach someone they otherwise wouldn’t have.

And if you’re a VIB reading this – hello! 👋 Feel free to drop your blog link in the comments below!

What to expect from this bilingual parenting blog?
– Snippets of our bilingual family life (yes, the messy bits too!)
– Reflections on how the theories I’ve studied actually play out in day-to-day parenting
– Practical, research-informed tips for raising children with more than one language
– Behind-the-scenes insights from my coaching work with multilingual families
– Plus exclusive resources for newsletter subscribers!

Whether you’re a fellow parent, a language lover, or just curious about how this all works – I’m so glad you’re here. And if you’re reading this, maybe you’re just the kind of person I started writing for in the first place.

Pop your name on my email list so I can keep in touch and send you my blog posts, personal and professional insights, and gentle tips for raising multilingual kids:

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Comments

4 responses to “I’m now officially a Very Interesting Blogger 🎉”

  1. […] I’m now officially a Very Interesting Blogger 🎉 […]

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  2. Hi, fellow language and also fellow VIB here. I don’t have a child of my onw but I do teach other people’s children, mainly in maths. So far I really enjoy the gentle nudge Judith’s emails give me each Monday.

    So this is mostly to wish you lots of fun from the VIB experience and I am looking forward to seeing more of your posts 🙂

    Angela

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    1. Thank you for reading and commeting, Angela! Do you teach at secondary schools? In my ‘real job’, I teach English to future English teachers – but I don’t envy you or them for working with teenagers these days! 😉
      LG Clare

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      1. Hi, here to add the missing word “lover” and to say: I don’t work as a school teacher anymore. I used to, from 2005 until 2014. Now I tutor, which is a totally different experience 😉 My students bring pen and paper to class and say “thank you” afterwards.

        In small doses I really enjpoy working with teenagers. Gen Z and Alpha all in all do give me hope.

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