Making Space for Others
As Paula worked with students, especially at the college level, she began to notice a pattern.
“So many students would say, ‘I don’t know enough about my culture.’”
Some had grown up off-reserve. Some on-reserve. It didn’t always make a difference.
“People feel like they’re not enough,” she says. “Not Native enough. Not brown enough. Not connected enough.”
She understood that.
“I had one foot in each canoe,” she says. “And I know a lot of people who feel that way.”
So her work shifted.
Less about instruction. More about creating space.
“I wanted people to feel like they belonged. Like they didn’t have to prove anything.”
At Sheridan, she built Indigenous student spaces from the ground up.
“We had people coming through all the time. Drum circles, teachings, events. People needed that.”
It mattered that there was somewhere safe to go.
A place where you didn’t have to explain yourself.
A lot of that work, she was doing on her own.
“I didn’t have a team,” she says. “I was doing it across three campuses.”
Still, she kept going.
“You do what you can. You make space where you can.”
At home, that same thinking carried through.
“I wanted my kids to feel good about who they are,” she says. “No matter what.”