She barely attended the first years of primary school, but her mother, as was customary at the time, was responsible for cultivating her culture by approaching books and art.
In 1941, her daughter María Antonia was born, she was a prodigy girl on the piano and would die in full youth because of a Diabetes Mellitus I.
She then moved to Caracas where Harriet Serr, one of the best piano teachers in the United States, would support her child prodigy.
Her situation worsened until she died, months after she was married and after actively participating in the subversive movements of the extreme left.
The writer returned in 1972 with the stories Insular in which she made a poetic incursion into the future of consciousness and in 1973 she published “Texts of eviction”, prose poems.
The last publications she made were “A square occupying a disconcerting space” (stories, 1981), “Multiplicated shadow” (1983), “The stone and the mirror” (1985), “Fictions and afflictions” (1989), “Long wind of memories” (1989), “That dark animal of the dream” (1991), “deep tremor of the secret” (1993 She died in Altamira, Caracas on March 13, 2001, after a period of loneliness, accentuated by the loss of hearing.