Yvonne Watterson Writing
Yvonne Watterson Writing

considering the lilies & lessons from the field ©

More About Yvonne

More About Yvonne

More about Yvonne

Yvonne Watterson is a Northern Irish-born writer and educator, now based near Guadalajara, Mexico. Her career in public education spans 30 years, during which she led school reform initiatives featured in national outlets including The New York Times and Education Week. Her work as a high school principal in Arizona focused on equity, inclusion, and student advocacy, earning both local and national attention. Yvonne's writing life began in November 2011, after an invasive breast cancer diagnosis sent her searching for answers online. What began as survival grew into a practice of storytelling, with her work appearing beyond this blog in The Irish Times, Irish Central, Reading Ireland, and other outlets. Yvonne's essays and reflections explore themes ranging from The Troubles in Northern Ireland and the poetry of Seamus Heaney to personal experiences of illness, loss, and resilience after being widowed in 2013. She compiled and edited Documented Dreams, a bilingual collection of letters documenting her advocacy with young immigrant students, and she contributed to Bravados: An Anthology, featuring 21 personal narratives by expats living in the Lake Chapala region. Most recently, she collaborated with Stephen Travers on The Bass Player – Surviving the Miami Showband Massacre. Yvonne’s social justice advocacy has earned her numerous honors, including the City of Phoenix Martin Luther King “Living the Dream” Award and the YWCA Tribute to Women Social Justice Leader Award. She is also a musician, performing with her partner, Scott Henrich, in The Old Souls Band, a six-piece Americana ensemble based in Ajijic, Mexico and she plays violin in the Lake Chapala Community Orchestra. Her daughter, Sophie, also a writer, lives in Arizona. “If you have the words, there's always a chance that you'll find the way.” ― Seamus Heaney

About Yvonne

From there to here . . . Yvonne Watterson is a Northern Irish-born writer and educator, now based near Guadalajara, Mexico. Her career in public education spans nearly 30 years, during which she led school reform initiatives featured in national outlets including The New York Times and Education Week. Her work as a high school principal in Arizona focused on equity, inclusion, and student advocacy, earning both local and national attention. Her writing life began in 2011, after an invasive breast cancer diagnosis sent her searching for answers online. What began as survival grew into a practice of storytelling, with her work appearing in The Irish Times, Irish Central, Reading Ireland, and other outlets. Her essays and reflections explore themes ranging from The Troubles in Northern Ireland and the poetry of Seamus Heaney to personal experiences of illness, loss, and resilience after being widowed in 2013. She compiled and edited Documented Dreams, a bilingual collection of letters documenting her advocacy with young immigrant students, and she contributed to Bravados: An Anthology, featuring 21 personal narratives by expats living in the Lake Chapala region. Most recently, she collaborated with Stephen Travers on The Bass Player – Surviving the Miami Showband Massacre. Yvonne’s social justice advocacy has earned her numerous honors, including the City of Phoenix Martin Luther King “Living the Dream” Award and the YWCA Tribute to Women Social Justice Leader Award. She is also a musician, performing with her partner, Scott Henrich, in The Old Souls Band, an Americana ensemble based in Ajijic, Mexico and she plays violin in the Lake Chapala Community Orchestra. Her daughter, Sophie, is also a writer, living in Arizona.

  • Awesome Women,  Being young,  Breaking Bad,  Fireworks,  Friendships,  Grieving,  James Gandolfini,  Lou Reed,  Love,  Marriage,  Memoir,  Mother Daughter Relationship,  New Year,  Northern Ireland Culture,  Rites of passage,  Robert Frost,  saying goodbye,  The Sopranos,  Themes of childhood,  Time,  Writing

    cups of kindness

    December 31, 2013 / 26 Comments

     “Life isn’t some vertical or horizontal line — you have your own interior world, and it’s not neat.”  Patti Smith How do I begin to put the stuff of the past twelve months in a box and tie it up in a big red bow? Just begin. Pluck out a memory and wrap it up. Move on to the next.…

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    Editor
  • A Poem for Michael and Christopher,  Blackberry Picking,  Clearances,  Family,  Feminism,  nikki giovanni,  Northern Ireland,  Northern Ireland Culture,  Poetry,  removing training wheels,  Rites of passage,  Rituals,  Soundtracks of our Lives,  Starting over,  Themes of Childhood,  Time,  Wheels within Wheels

    getting a grip on things ~ noli timere

    December 26, 2013 / 33 Comments

    Had someone told me this was going to happen, I wonder what we would have done differently or better or both with our remaining days together. Would an expiration date on our family have changed the way we lived those thirty days? Would we have crammed in the kinds of things typically found on bucket-lists or would we have made…

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    Editor
  • Aging,  Arizona,  Birthdays,  Breast Cancer Awareness Month,  Death and dying,  Diagnosis,  Family,  Fireworks,  Irish culture,  Irish mammies,  John Hiatt,  Loss,  Love,  Memoir,  Memory,  Mother Daughter Relationship,  Muriel Rukeyser,  New Year,  Newgrange,  No Country for Old Men,  Northern Ireland Culture,  Ordinary Things,  saying goodbye,  Soundtracks of our Lives,  Starting over,  Ted Kooser,  Themes of Childhood,  Time

    my ‘slow turning’ ~ winter solstice 2013

    December 22, 2013 / 25 Comments

    It is a magic time, captured before clocks and calendars and compasses measured time and the distance between us, signifying the turn towards a new year. I’m not ready for it. I am not ready for days that stretch out even longer than each of the thirty-six that have passed since the day my husband died. Thirty-six. I cannot bring…

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    Editor
  • Dunblane,  Guns,  Memoir,  Newtown,  School shootings,  Themes of childhood

    silent night again . . . from newtown to dunblane

    December 14, 2013 / 12 Comments

    December 14, 2012 Cold and lifeless, the bodies of twenty little children lie where they were gunned down that morning at Sandy Hook Elementary School. It is a crime scene that the day before was a school. The medical examiner’s team has begun its work through the night to make sure there are no mistakes, no shadow of doubt about the names of those children…

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    Editor
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