Rocky Mountain Public Media, the home of Rocky Mountain PBS, KUVO Jazz, and TheDrop303 has a partnership with Colorado Ethnic Media Exchange to launch this monthly essay series, as part of our vision to co-create a Colorado where everyone feels seen and heard.
These stories are sourced from community members across the state—told in their own words and selected from our 64-county community ambassador program. They are not editorial products of our journalism team, but are first-person reflections on life in Colorado - building bridges through empathy. Learn more about all of our brands and content at www.rmpbs.org/about.
I have been fortunate this fall to travel around Colorado for a leadership program I was nominated to participate in through work. I’ve visited Vail and Fort Collins, and in doing so, I passed through parts of the state I had rarely seen. It reminded me how diverse our experiences are as Coloradans, shaped by where we live. Each place is distinct from the next—and even more so from where I grew up.
I am a multigenerational Coloradan, born and raised a Pueblo prairie girl. I grew up on the north side of Pueblo, where my backyard was cactus, rattlesnakes, coyotes yipping at night, and endless freedom to explore. I look back and remember so much joy growing up in Pueblo—except it was (and still is) so very hot in the summers!
When I would share that I’m from Pueblo, I used to brace myself, waiting for the ridicule—a sigh or a dreaded, heavy “Oh.” Then came the awkward silence while they judged me based only on what they’d heard about Pueblo. I never fully understood why it seemed like such a terrible thing to be from there. Sure, Pueblo doesn’t have big attractions like the larger cities, and it’s not nestled at the base of a mountain with hiking trails. In my twenties, I even had the urge to leave my small town for something more and set my sights on Denver.
I now live in Colorado Springs, just north of downtown. I made the short move up I-25 nine years ago, and in almost every way, it feels like a different world—the landscape, the buildings, the history, the people, and even the summer temperatures.
Through my work at Colorado College, I meet with community members across the Pikes Peak Region and learn about the challenges and opportunities that exist here. I’m part of a team that educates students on seeing and starting from the strengths and assets of a place—of a community.
So when I hear the scoffs and see the judgment in others’ eyes when I proudly state I grew up in Pueblo, I know they don’t see the neighborhood block parties and BBQs, drive-in nights with friends and primos, art classes at the Children’s Museum, walks along the Riverwalk, football games that bring out the whole community, the smell of roasting chiles in the fall, and festivals rooted in the love and history that is my home. They’ve only heard about Pueblo—they’ve never truly seen, experienced, or lived Pueblo.
I brace less now when I share where I’m from, and I hear fewer and fewer judgments—especially from those committed to community building. For those who know and understand community, they share their own love for Pueblo gems: the Chile & Frijoles Festival, breweries, coffee shops, bike trails, a water park along the river, the farms, and the people whose families go back generations and keep traditions alive.
I love my new home, and it has also made me love my first home even more. Pueblo is where my story begins, and no matter where I live, it continues to shape the future I’m growing toward.
We Want to Hear from You
We’re inviting community members across the state to share their own stories of living in Colorado—of identity, discovery, and what it means to belong. Tell us about a moment or a place in Colorado that changed how you see yourself or your community.
Share your reflections at ambassador64@rmpbs.org
This is part of Ambassador64, our statewide listening initiative to ensure public media reflects the voices of all 64 counties in Colorado—starting with yours.
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