
Kamila Diana Walkiewicz
Born in '81. Officially on a gap year since 2000—one I never actually came back from.
It all started with an injury. Growing up, my world revolved around sports: acrobatics, athletics, and judo. I was an aerobics instructor until my knees finally said "enough." No job meant no tuition, so I took a leave of absence from university and headed to Italy. This was before Poland joined the EU—the world felt bigger, tougher, and far more unpredictable. What was meant to be a brief break became the start of a journey that continues to this day.
Life Without a Script
I’ve visited over 70 countries, but instead of souvenirs, I collected experiences that would make an action movie protagonist jealous.
I’ve run my own tattoo studio, worked on crew ships, and scrubbed decks in shipyards. I’ve been a construction assistant and a bartender in places you won't find on Google Maps. For a while, I let myself be locked in boxes and set on fire as an assistant to an acrobat-magician; I performed on the streets when money ran low and smoked meats for those craving a bit of luxury.
15,000 Miles and One Near-Miss
I spent over a year at sea, covering 15,000 nautical miles. That’s where I learned humility toward the ocean—navigating between cyclones and trusting captains more often than technology.
Death has stared me in the face a few times, but the most ironic moment happened while water skiing. Tangled in the tow rope and dragged underwater, I only survived because the guy at the helm turned around at that exact second to take a photo. It taught me one thing: the stories worth telling begin where safety ends.
The Cambodia Stopover
After years of wandering—the last eight of them shared with my boyfriend—we made the riskiest decision of all: we decided to settle down. For two months now, Cambodia has been our home. Is this the finish line? I doubt it. It’s more like the next base camp.
What Do I Write About?
This is a return to the decade between 2000 and 2011. A time when the internet was a luxury found in internet cafes, photos disappeared along with stolen cameras, and adventure tasted different because it wasn't for show. I write about a world where every "too crazy to be true" moment actually happened.
Maupiti Atoll , French Polynesia
Embera Indian. Soberania National Park. Panama

Somewhere in Namibia