Where do you begin when even your origin is uncertain?
The Blueprint of Adaptation is a quiet, uncompromising memoir about growing up without stability of place, family structure, or emotional language and learning to survive through observation, discipline, and deliberate choice.
From early childhood in Ivory Coast marked by separation and movement, to arriving in England as a young boy unable to speak the language, this memoir traces a life shaped not by comfort, but by adaptation. The author navigates strict households, institutional control, cultural displacement, and silent expectations learning early how to watch, listen, and endure without explanation.
This is not a story told for shock or sympathy. It is a record of navigation: how a child learns to read people before books, how silence becomes strategy, and how resilience is built quietly over time. Family, school, authority, and independence are explored with clarity and restraint, revealing how identity can be shaped in the absence of certainty.
Written with precision and reflection, The Blueprint of Adaptation speaks to anyone who has had to grow up early, live between worlds, or build themselves without a map.
This memoir does not offer easy answers.
It offers honesty and a blueprint for survival, presence, and self-definition.