Toni Kent is a writer, blogger and language lover.
Born in Basingstoke and now living in the Berkshire countryside with her husband and their two children she writes features, articles, poems and endless lists.
When not conjuring up another adventure for Mr Reuben or scratching her head about life as a woman at www.tonikent.blogspot.co.uk, Toni runs cross-country, performs stand up and poetry and wonders if she is secretly harbouring an inner-cook. Based on the kitchen fire she caused whilst trying to follow Jamie Oliver 'cheat's pizza' recipe, it would seem that she isn't.
Toni tweets as @tonijkent and shares updates on her writing via Facebook at www.facebook.com/tonijkentToni Kent is a writer, blogger and language lover.
Born in Basingstoke and now living in the Berkshire countryside with her husband and their two children she writes features, articles, poems and endless lists.
When not conjuring up another adventure for Mr Reuben or scratching her head about life as a woman at www.tonikent.blogspot.co.uk, Toni runs cross-country, performs stand up and poetry and wonders if she is secretly harbouring an inner-cook. Based on the kitchen fire she caused whilst trying to follow Jamie Oliver 'cheat's pizza' recipe, it would seem that she isn't.
I've been thinking a lot about community recently. What is it? And what does it actually mean?
In the corporate spaces I've worked in, and spoken at, there's often emphasis on community and belonging to the extent that 'Belonging'appears in job titles - LinkedIn contains hundreds of profiles where this is the case. Some organisations, it would seem, want employees to feel like they're one big fami