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As A Little Girl Growing Up In Colombia [new] May 2026

Growing up as a little girl in Colombia is a sensory masterpiece, a childhood painted in the vibrant colors of tropical fruit and the rhythmic pulse of a country that breathes music. It is a world where the boundaries between family, community, and celebration blur into a single, warm embrace. My mornings often began with the smell of toasting on a clay budare and the rich, sweet aroma of chocolate santafereño

: Annual milestones like New Year's Eve are celebrated with specific rituals, such as wearing yellow for good luck. 3. Food and Flavors as a little girl growing up in colombia

As a little girl growing up in Colombia, you internalize that you are made of the same stuff as the mountains (the Andes) and the same flow as the rivers (the Amazon). You are a product of mestizaje—the mixing of Indigenous endurance, Spanish structure, and African rhythm. Growing up as a little girl in Colombia

To paint a picture of that childhood is to dip a brush in colors that don’t exist anywhere else. It is not the Colombia of news headlines or Netflix narcoseries. It is the Colombia of foggy mornings in the altiplano, the scent of guava and wet earth, and the sound of my aunt’s voice singing while she ironed ruanas. To paint a picture of that childhood is

Sundays were for the mountains—long drives through winding roads where the air turned crisp and the green of the hills felt deep enough to drown in. We’d stop for hot chocolate with melted cheese, a salty-sweet ritual that felt like home in a cup. There was a magic in the chaos: the neighbors shouting greetings across balconies, the sudden tropical downpours that turned the streets into rivers, and the fierce, unwavering pride of a people who find a reason to celebrate in every single day.

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