From Corporate Corridors to Bookshelves
My Journey to Personal Empowerment
    
														
If “corporate gladiator turned career whisperer” were a job title, I’d already have it trademarked. Thirty-four years navigating the corporate corridors of ExxonMobil — from New York to Nigeria — taught me how to lead, adapt, and rise. But it was the journey from those corridors to the bookshelves that transformed me.
I was born in the Dominican Republic and raised in the projects of Manhattan’s Upper West Side — long before the Latino community had the supportive networks we see today. As the daughter of immigrants, I faced cultural and linguistic challenges that made every step feel uphill. Yet I climbed. I earned my degree in international business management from Pace University — while working full-time as a secretary at Mobil in the early 1980s. If I had a dime for every person who told me the company would never acknowledge my part-time degree and that I was wasting my time, I would’ve retired years earlier. I was competing with Ivy League graduates and seasoned professionals for every promotion. But I knew my worth, and I refused to let anyone else define it.
At ExxonMobil, I held a wide range of domestic and international roles, each with increasing responsibility. My assignments took me across the United States, Europe, Central and South America, and Nigeria. I served as a business development manager and as President of our Employee Resource Group, where I had the honor of representing the company at the Hispanic Heritage Foundation’s Regional and National Scholarship Awards. I also hosted, keynoted, and spoke on panels for organizations supported by our corporate foundation.
But despite all my professional successes, the role that brought me the greatest fulfillment was mentoring others. Helping junior employees navigate the corporate environment — especially those who felt unseen or underestimated — became my true calling. Guiding them through challenges, celebrating their wins, and watching them rise was more rewarding than any title I ever held. That experience — of lifting others as I climbed — became the very impetus for my first book, Empower Yourself for an Amazing Career.
In 2012, I published Empower Yourself for an Amazing Career, a book born from that lived experience. It wasn’t just career advice — it was a call to awaken. I wanted readers to stop sleepwalking through their professional lives and start leading with purpose. The book blends practical strategies with emotional intelligence, spiritual grounding, and the kind of wisdom you only earn after decades in the trenches. Kirkus Reviews called it “an accessible guide for empowering women to advance in their careers,” and the New England Book Festival recognized its broad appeal across industries and generations.
Since then, I’ve published twelve books — including A Holistic Approach to Your Career, an evolved version of my first, infused with deeper insight and broader perspective. My catalog spans genres: bilingual editions, personal development, historical fiction, and stories of love, betrayal, and healing. Titles like Pursuing a Better Tomorrow and From Gold to Glass reflect my belief that storytelling is a sacred act — one that can bridge cultures, generations, and emotional truths.
Today, I continue to empower others through professional workshops and speaking engagements, using Empower Yourself for an Amazing Career and A Holistic Approach to Your Career as foundational platforms. Whether I’m leading a corporate seminar or speaking to a room full of emerging professionals, my goal is the same: to help people reconnect with their purpose, navigate change with confidence, and define success on their own terms.
Above all, I write to inspire. I am a dedicated author on a lifelong journey to uplift others through the written word — to offer clarity, courage, and connection to those seeking transformation. My books are more than pages; they are invitations to rise. Whether I’m writing about career strategy, love and loss, or personal evolution, my goal remains the same: to spark reflection, offer food for thought, and help readers discover something meaningful about themselves. If a reader closes one of my books feeling stronger, clearer, or more compassionate than when they began — then I’ve done my job.
Being featured by Influential Women is more than an honor — it’s a moment of reflection. I’ve spent my life breaking barriers, and now I help others build ladders where none existed. My mission is to uplift women — especially those navigating multicultural, bilingual, or nontraditional paths — and to remind them that their story is their strength.
So, to every woman reading this: if your career has turned into just a job, it’s time to recalibrate. Success isn’t a title — it’s a truth you live out loud. And you deserve to write your own definition.
Defining your career isn’t about the company you work for, your job title, your salary, or the perks. It’s about your self-evaluation, your sense of accomplishment, and your ability to define success for yourself — rather than letting others define it for you. When planning the journey of your career, don’t settle for good or even great. Make exceptional your benchmark.
The choice is yours. You decide.