EPISODE · Mar 1, 2026 · 32 MIN
Growing Up Jamaican in Britain: Survival vs Belonging
from On The Veranda - with Kel · host Kellee Thomas-Plummer
Were we raised to survive Britain… or were we raised to belong in it?In this episode of On The Veranda with Kel, I sit down with my sister to reflect on what our Jamaican upbringing really prepared us for. We were raised in Jamaica with strong principles church on high expectations, discipline, kindness, education first, and the understanding that nothing is given unless it is earned. But when we moved to Britain at different ages, those same principles began to land differently.We talk honestly about what it meant to arrive in the UK as Jamaican children and young adults. From being bullied for our accents to adjusting our tone in professional spaces, we explore how survival often meant softening parts of ourselves. We unpack the cultural codes we didn’t realise we were carrying saying “morning” to strangers, being direct instead of indirect, and navigating British politeness without losing our identity.This conversation also reflects on Jamaican parenting. Was the strictness control, or was it protection? Did our parents prepare us for Jamaica, or were they unknowingly preparing us for life anywhere? We discuss the difference between Jamaican long-term expectation and British reward culture the quiet “well done” versus public celebration. We examine resilience, work ethic, accountability, kindness, and the internal pressure to succeed.There is humour in this episode, but there is also honesty. We touch on hyper-awareness, cultural adjustment, identity shifts, and the subtle anxiety that can come from constantly scanning your environment to adapt. We consider what we’ve kept from our upbringing and what we’ve had to adjust in order to move through British society.If you grew up in a Jamaican household in Britain, or you’re part of the Caribbean diaspora navigating two cultures at once, this episode will likely feel familiar. This is a grounded, reflective conversation about migration, belonging, survival, and identity without hype or dramatics.We weren’t raised to chase applause. We were raised to endure, to work, to adapt, and to hold our values. The question is was that survival, or was that belonging?Subscribe to On The Veranda with Kel for thoughtful conversations on Jamaican identity, diaspora life, migration, culture, and becoming.
What this episode covers
Were we raised to survive Britain… or were we raised to belong in it?In this episode of On The Veranda with Kel, I sit down with my sister to reflect on what our Jamaican upbringing really prepared us for. We were raised in Jamaica with strong principles church on high expectations, discipline, kindness, education first, and the understanding that nothing is given unless it is earned. But when we moved to Britain at different ages, those same principles began to land differently.We talk honestly about what it meant to arrive in the UK as Jamaican children and young adults. From being bullied for our accents to adjusting our tone in professional spaces, we explore how survival often meant softening parts of ourselves. We unpack the cultural codes we didn’t realise we were carrying saying “morning” to strangers, being direct instead of indirect, and navigating British politeness without losing our identity.This conversation also reflects on Jamaican parenting. Was the strictness control, or was it protection? Did our parents prepare us for Jamaica, or were they unknowingly preparing us for life anywhere? We discuss the difference between Jamaican long-term expectation and British reward culture the quiet “well done” versus public celebration. We examine resilience, work ethic, accountability, kindness, and the internal pressure to succeed.There is humour in this episode, but there is also honesty. We touch on hyper-awareness, cultural adjustment, identity shifts, and the subtle anxiety that can come from constantly scanning your environment to adapt. We consider what we’ve kept from our upbringing and what we’ve had to adjust in order to move through British society.If you grew up in a Jamaican household in Britain, or you’re part of the Caribbean diaspora navigating two cultures at once, this episode will likely feel familiar. This is a grounded, reflective conversation about migration, belonging, survival, and identity without hype or dramatics.We weren’t raised to chase applause. We were raised to endure, to work, to adapt, and to hold our values. The question is was that survival, or was that belonging?Subscribe to On The Veranda with Kel for thoughtful conversations on Jamaican identity, diaspora life, migration, culture, and becoming.
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Growing Up Jamaican in Britain: Survival vs Belonging
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