CREATOR PROFILE

Ruth Clark

Solo Travel Blogger
Ruth's travels have been her classroom—and her curriculum runs from practical survival skills to the slower work of learning how to live with openness. She has been published in Modern Trekker and Women's Agenda, and her writing advocates for a version of travel that doesn't paper over discomfort but treats it as part of the education. She is also a teacher and artist, and that range shows in her work: patient, observational, and grounded in a commitment to authentic experience over performance.

Content
Travel

Experience

Creator Portfolio

EXPERIENCE WITH PROPS

Ruth's editorial practice centers on solo travel—its freedoms, its frictions, and the personal growth that emerges when itineraries come apart at the seams. Her writing for brands in the travel and lifestyle space brings a distinctive combination of earned authority and emotional honesty, appealing to readers who want guidance from someone who has genuinely been there and found their way back.

Subject Matter

Solo travel and international adventure, with a through-line of authentic living and personal resilience. Ruth's published work examines the emotional and practical terrain of independent travel—what to do when things go sideways, how to stay present in unfamiliar places, and why the disruptions are often the best parts.

Travel

Content Formats

Personal narrative essay and practical travel writing. Ruth's style is literary without being precious—her stories are grounded in specific moments and specific places, but they reach for something larger about the nature of exploration and self-reliance. She writes for publication-ready quality, whether the context is a magazine feature or branded editorial.

Visual Portfolio

Get to know

Ruth Clark

When I missed my connecting train in Toulouse—a city I'd never been to, where I didn't speak the language—I was crushed. My well-laid plans were suddenly in flux, and I had only myself to depend on. It turned out to be one of the most instructive travel experiences I've ever had, and everything that followed taught me something worth passing on: unexpected doesn't have to mean ruinous.

Sample Work

Props POV

Published

Published with Props

How to Be Okay with Travel Plans Not Going as Planned