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    #letsbuildcommunity

    Explore " #letsbuildcommunity" with insightful episodes like "Season 2, Episode 45: Talking Sisterhood, Leadership, and Service with Dr. Araba Afenyi-Annan and Educator Leola Banks", "Season 2, Episode 44: But Is She Funny?", "Season 2, Episode 43: Bodily Autonomy is for Everybody", "Season 2, Episode 42: Jacqueline M. Baker Talks Leadership & Etiquette" and "Season 2, Episode 41: Find Your North Star and #JustStart with Jacqueline M. Baker" from podcasts like ""That Social Work Lady", "That Social Work Lady", "That Social Work Lady", "That Social Work Lady" and "That Social Work Lady"" and more!

    Episodes (21)

    Season 2, Episode 45: Talking Sisterhood, Leadership, and Service with Dr. Araba Afenyi-Annan and Educator Leola Banks

    Season 2, Episode 45: Talking Sisterhood, Leadership, and Service with Dr. Araba Afenyi-Annan and Educator Leola Banks

    Episode 45 is the season finale for Season 2 for That Social Work Lady Podcast. Recorded on November 12, 2022, this episode pays homage to my sorority Sigma Gamma Rho Sorority, Inc. I am so grateful to the two women who joined me to celebrate our sorority's centennial celebration: Dr. Araba Afenyi-Annan and Educator Leola Banks.  We pledged together at the University of Michigan - Ann Arbor (Iota Psi Chapter) and have each done the work to live out our sorority mission - Greater Service, Greater Progress!

    Sigma Gamma Rho Sorority, Inc. was organized on November 12, 1922, in Indianapolis, Indiana, by seven young educators: Mary Lou Allison Gardner Little, Dorothy Hanley Whiteside, Vivian Irene White Marbury, Nannie Mae Gahn Johnson, Hattie Mae Annette Dulin Redford, Bessie Mae Downey Rhoades Martin, and Cubena McClure. The group became an incorporated national collegiate sorority on December 30, 1929, when a charter was granted to the Alpha chapter at Butler University. Since its inception, the dynamic women of Sigma Gamma Rho have built and sustained a well-known and well-respected reputation for leading positive change to help uplift the community through sisterhood, leadership, and service.

    LEOLA BANKS, known as Tee to her family and close friends, is a proud native Detroiter and product of the Detroit Public School District; graduating 2nd in her class from Central High School. She currently works as an Assistant Principal with Detroit Public Schools Community District.  Ms. Banks has taught elementary as well as middle school reading, language arts and mathematics.  She also served in various roles (Lead Teacher, Title I Intervention Teacher and Instructional Specialist) prior to her current role in administration. She received a Bachelor of Arts Degree in Communications from The University of Michigan, Ann Arbor and has earned two Master’s degrees in Curriculum & Instruction and Educational Leadership from the University of Detroit Mercy.  Leola is a committed advocate for equity and quality education for under-represented and underprivileged children which has been her motivation for remaining in public education.  Ms. Banks has a close-knit family; two sisters and a very loving mother, her greatest supporter, who raised three girls as a single parent. Additionally, she is a proud member of Sigma Gamma Rho Sorority, Inc., enjoys attending and serving in her church, spending time with family, friends and traveling.  Ms. Banks is honored to be an educator.  She wholeheartedly believes it is her “ministry.” Most importantly, God has had His hands on her for a very long time.  Since her baptism, at the age of 14, she has enjoyed gospel music, reading, and studying the Word of God.  She loves the Lord!

    Dr. Araba Afenyi-Annan is a retired academic physician, researcher, and educator. After a life changing injury left her permanently disabled in chronic pain, she was led on a new life path and understanding of healing. As a student and practitioner of A Course In Miracles, she believes her true purpose is to be truly helpful and live a life of Love. Her life is a testament to the power of grace. Now a certified spiritual counselor, facilitator, author and speaker, it is her joy and honor to support others on their journey of spiritual growth and awakening. A mother and co-parent of two teenagers, she believes parenting is an untapped yet vital vehicle for individual and collective transformation. 

    To learn more about the illustrious organization, Sigma Gamma Rho Sorority, Inc.:
    https://www.sgrho1922.org/
    https://www.instagram.com/sgrhoupdates/
    https://www.facebook.com/sgrhoupdates

    Season 2, Episode 44: But Is She Funny?

    Season 2, Episode 44: But Is She Funny?

    Comediennes are community griots. They make spaces for the stories that we all need to know and tell them with flare and honesty while making us laugh.

    enoje (EN-oh-jay) is a community griot. In episode 44, she graces me with her brilliance, and goals for creating space for women to explore comedy for our mental health and well being. She takes her cue from her own mother's laughter. Remembering stories from her childhood of her mother and the aunties being in the kitchen telling each other stories from their day and laughing uncontrollably. Their joy is the focus of her mission. More specifically, extending that joy to as many women who are willing to join in.

    enoje is the founder and director of Bish Funny, a comedy project that creates opportunities for women+. She's the host of Let 'Em Eat Laughs, a conversation series about comedians, food, and culture. enoje is an Executive Board member of the Black Women in Comedy Laff Fest in New York. And she is the host and producer of Toronto's recently launched popular comedy series, Ladies Love Cool Jokes.

    Follow enoje on
    Instagram @funnybishness or
    Ladies Love Cool Jokes
    The Black Women in Comedy Laff Fest

    Season 2, Episode 43: Bodily Autonomy is for Everybody

    Season 2, Episode 43: Bodily Autonomy is for Everybody

    Abortion is a medical procedure that ends a pregnancy.  Why then is something so basic at the heart of so many toxic conversations?

    Episode 43 brings a topic that is very dear to my heart - bodily autonomy. It’s time we reframe the abortion conversation as a discussion about right to privacy and bodily autonomy.  Any other approach to this conversation is problematic and grounded in patriarchal toxicity. American citizens with the capacity for pregnancy deserve to be able to make medical decisions about their bodies with the guidance of medical care professions of their choosing without the interference of people who are ignorant to the actual functions of the female reproduction system. 

    Learn more about the facts on abortion and reproductive health:
    https://usafacts.org/data/topics/security-safety/child-care-and-safety/foster-care/children-in-foster-care/?utm_source=google&utm_medium=cpc&utm_campaign=ND-StatsData&gclid=Cj0KCQjwqc6aBhC4ARIsAN06NmMfs-NCPJ8aVdLIo10CN5q44b-yhnuANNN0POT1umbfjGf9yo3ainsaAvcaEALw_wcB

    https://www.statista.com/statistics/191226/reported-forcible-rape-rate-in-the-us-since-1990/

    https://www.plannedparenthood.org/learn/abortion/in-clinic-abortion-procedures

    https://www.amnesty.org/en/what-we-do/sexual-and-reproductive-rights/abortion-facts/

    https://www.mayoclinic.org/tests-procedures/dilation-and-curettage/about/pac-20384910

    Season 2, Episode 42: Jacqueline M. Baker Talks Leadership & Etiquette

    Season 2, Episode 42: Jacqueline M. Baker Talks Leadership & Etiquette

    Jacqueline M. Baker is a speaker, author, leadership consultant and advisor known for her unique approach to modern etiquette and leadership. As the author of The Unexpected Leader: Discovering the Leader Within You and Leader by Mistake: Becoming A Leader One Mistake At A Time, she frequently speaks and writes on the leadership-for-all concept.

    In Episode 42, I got to speak with leadership consultant and entrepreneur Jacqueline M. Baker about her company Scarlet Communications and the impact she has had on leadership training in corporate America. Baker’s story is one of perseverance, finding your niche and pursuing it. From her perspective we are ALL leaders. Listening to her share her unique definition for leadership and the way she teaches etiquette so that her clients will shine no matter the environment they find themselves in, will have you believing and owning your own capacity for leadership.

    For more information about the work Jacqueline M. Baker does and to grab a copy of her books, go to:
    https://jacquelinembaker.com/
    Just Start: From Ideas to Action Podcast

    Season 2, Episode 41: Find Your North Star and #JustStart with Jacqueline M. Baker

    Season 2, Episode 41: Find Your North Star and #JustStart with Jacqueline M. Baker

    Episode 41 brings another Black woman's story and this time we're getting advice from a leadership expert.

    Jacqueline M. Baker is a speaker, author, leadership consultant and advisor known for her unique approach to modern etiquette and leadership. As the author of The Unexpected Leader: Discovering the Leader Within You and Leader by Mistake: Becoming A Leader One Mistake At A Time, she frequently speaks and writes on the leadership-for-all concept.

    This conversation that I got to have with Jacqueline M. Baker is a full motivational lesson for the unexpected leader. I appreciate Baker for her uncanny ability to elevate uncommon genius and help the reluctant leaders among us accept our role. Baker reminds us that you don't have to ALL the things you think you need to move in the direction of your goals and dreams. What you need most to START is to know your personal North Star. When you know your North Star, according to Baker, you will know which direction to move in.  I agree with her. Find your North Star and then start.

    For more information about the work Jacqueline M. Baker does and to grab a copy of her books, go to:
    https://jacquelinembaker.com/
    Just Start: From Ideas to Action Podcast

    Season 2, Episode 40: Pivoting while Parenting for Black and Brown Mamas and Papas

    Season 2, Episode 40: Pivoting while Parenting for Black and Brown Mamas and Papas

    The world has shifted. It has changed. So how do you are a parent of black or brown child pivot to be responsive to the times we live in now?

    ...parents fear being viewed as inconsistent or worst undermining our own authority by changing our minds. The paradox of that is that there is no better expression of authority to making a change due to changing circumstances or the realization that you didn't do enough due diligence before making a decision.
    -Heather Frazier, Pivot Parenting Podcast

    Episode 40 explores the need for black and brown parents to revise the parenting strategies we've leaned on for centuries. Our conservatism that served us so well in the 20th century have helped us keep our children safe in a world hellbent on their demise. However, those strategies do NOT help us raise adults who will have the skills they need to navigate life in a global community. We  have to recognize the world our children will 'adult' in is starkly different from the one we are currently 'adulting' in. So how can we continue to use the exact same tools and mindset in our parenting that was used to move us into adulthood? The truth is we undermine our authority with our children when we are restrictive and unmoving. The choke hold placed on kids is what threatens your relationship with your children. When you do more due diligence, when you open yourself up to the possibility that what has always been is not what will always be, you build and solidify the bridge between you and your child.

    Rules to Pivoting in Parenting:
    1. Pay attention to your child. Remind yourself that who they were at 7 will not be who they are at 12 or 14. Pay attention to the changes they are making in their values and ideas.
    2. Get to know the people your child surrounds themselves with both in person and virtually. Most kids in the 21st century who virtual friendships that are completely different from the friends they are around in person.
    3. Realize that your child's virtual life is just as vibrant and important to them as their 'real' life. Group chats, direct messaging, gaming squads, are communities that your child is engaged in. They may have a different persona that they take on in each community they navigate.
    4. Evaluate if the culture of the spaces you allow your child in aligns with your values and culture or are in alignment with who your child is evolving in to.
    5. Remember you can do this!

    Other resources to check out:
    https://danahirtparenting.com/new-blog/2018/2/9/how-to-pivot-when-changing-parenting-rules
    https://www.blackgirlspivot.com/
    https://heatherfrazier.com/podcast/

    Season 2, Episode 39: Authentic Rest is Power

    Season 2, Episode 39: Authentic Rest is Power

    Whew! I'm tired (please read as tiiiii'ed). But I know I'm not the only one out here feeling the multiple levels of tired that I feel.

    Episode 39  in this Season 2 is all about rest. Michale Bernard Beckwith once said, "Authentic Rest is power." I read that quote when my son was an infant after my body had been stressed and strained beyond my previously recognized limitations. I thought then that I knew what 'rest' meant. However, according to Dr. Saundra Dalton-Smith I grossly overestimated what I knew. Dr. Dalton-Smith's research demonstrates that we all have 7 buckets that must be filled in order to experience authentic rest. They are Physical, Mental, Emotional, Social, Sensory, Creative, and Spiritual. You may very well be getting all the physical rest you need, that does not mean you are rested! Your rejuvenation and renewal starts with identifying what kind of rest you actually need.

    Learn more about Dr. Dalton-Smith:
    https://www.drdaltonsmith.com

    Get her Book:
    Sacred Rest: Recover Your Life, Renew Your Energy, Restore Your Sanity


    Don't know who Michael Bernard Beckwith is, check him out as well:
    https://michaelbeckwith.com

    Season 2, Episode 38: Talking Autism Awareness with Special Needs Advocate and Educator Vertongie Kendrix-Bailey

    Season 2, Episode 38: Talking Autism Awareness with Special Needs Advocate and Educator Vertongie Kendrix-Bailey

    Special Needs Advocate and Educator Vertongie Kendrix-Bailey  shares in Episode 38, that was stressful to see her toddler cry a lot, act as if he was lost at times and throw tantrums. When he was 4 years old, her son Hezekiah was diagnosed with autism after a comprehensive evaluation by his medical team. The medical team that evaluated Hezekiah included a pediatrician, a psychiatrist, an occupational therapist, a speech and language pathologist, and a nurse. After the evaluation and diagnosis Kendrix-Bailey knew she had to get help for her son.  With that in mind, Kendrix-Bailey took it upon herself to educate herself about autism. She took college courses on children with special needs and autism. Then she began a nonprofit to educate and empower parents and other community members named, Hezekiah Kidz, Inc.

    The mission at Hezekiah Kidz, Inc. is to empower children with autism and other disabilities with life skills. This nonprofit aims to move children beyond their disabilities,  provide them with the skills to survive, and prepare them to live a meaningful life.  Hezekiah Kidz, Inc. envisions a world where all children regardless of their disabilities are valued and afforded resources to develop the skills to realize their full potential. Each year Hezekiah Kidz, Inc. hosts an Autism Community Day. This event raises awareness, provides links to community programs for parents of children with special needs, and offers fun activities for families and community members alike. Autism Community Day will take place on Saturday, September 24, 2022 at The Game Room in Livonia, MI.

     Kendrix-Bailey credits her oldest son with laying the groundwork for the mission and purpose of Hezekiah Kidz, Inc. He did this simply by showing his mother that her youngest son may have a diagnosed disability but that doesn't mean he doesn't have abilities! 

    Vertongie is a woman of great humility and expansive determination. She is a stroke survivor and parents a child with special needs. What others may see as set backs, Vertongie has turned into set ups for success. Parenting her son who has autism has taught her the importance of advocacy and has propelled her to work diligently to learn as much as she can in order to be the best support not only for her son but for all the children in her community.

    Vertongie began her educational journey in Detroit Public Schools. She holds a Bachelor's degree in Business Administration-Accounting, a Master's degree in Administration-Human Resources, and is currently working towards a 2nd Master's in Special Education with her eye on a Ph. D. in Behavioral Health. To say that she believes education is important in setting and achieving your goals would be an understatement.

    To learn more about  Vertongie's nonprofit and upcoming events check out:
    Hezekiah Kidz, Inc
    Autism Alliance
    Friendship Circle

    Season 2, Episode 37: Where Humility, Hard Work and Determination Meet

    Season 2, Episode 37: Where Humility, Hard Work and Determination Meet

    In Episode 37, Vertongie Kendrix-Bailey shares her journey as a mother and advocate for her two sons: Zechariah and Hezekiah. Her parenting philosophy guides how she has crafted community to support her values and goals for her family.

    As a highly educated professional, Vertongie is the kind of mother who uses all her resources and skills to provide for and advocate for her children and herself. Vertongie also serves as a parent liaison for Children with Special Needs, participates on nonprofit boards, trains parents on how to be better advocates for their children, organizes local campaigns,  and found her own foundation/small business Hezekiah Kidz, Inc.

    Vertongie is a woman of great humility and expansive determination. She is a stroke survivor and parents a child with special needs. What others may see as set backs, Vertongie has turned into set ups for success. Parenting her son who has autism has taught her the importance of advocacy and has propelled her to work diligently to learn as much as she can in order to be the best support not only for her son but for all the children in her community.

    Vertongie began her educational journey in Detroit Public Schools. She holds a Bachelor's degree in Business Administration-Accounting, a Master's degree in Administration-Human Resources, and is currently working towards a 2nd Master's in Special Education with her eye on a Ph. D. in Behavioral Health. To say that she believes education is important in setting and achieving your goals would be an understatement.

    To learn more about a few of the program Vertongie supports check out:
    Hezekiah Kidz, Inc
    DAPCEP
    CHADD
    Autism Alliance of Michigan

    Season 2, Episode 36: Coffee, Counseling, and Accessing Care

    Season 2, Episode 36: Coffee, Counseling, and Accessing Care

    Episode 36 continues our conversation with Detroit's very own #communitycounselor Patrece M. Lucas, MS, LPC.

    Patrece specializes in providing culturally specific counseling and creating safe healing spaces for African, Black, and other indigenous and BIPOC communities. She has committed her life's work to advocating for communities of color to not only survive but to dismantle broken systems and create new ones that are inherent on supporting and uplifting the communities capacity to thrive.

    As a licensed Mental Health Counselor Patrece serves as a community counselor in Detroit and its surrounding communities.  She is in private practice as a counselor, wellness partner and mediator at her agency called indigo transitions.

    In Episode 36, we learn more about Community Counselor Patrece Lucas's approach to mental health services and the origins of her program "Coffee with a Counselor." At the root of her motivation is to destigmatize mental health service and access for the Black community. She understood that in order to get more Black people engaged with a mental health professional she would first have to demystify the idea of 'going to therapy.'

    You can connect with Patrece via
    CoffeewithaCounselor@gmail.com
    indigo transitions 
    Where do Black Women Go to Grieve?

    Season 2, Episode 35: Where Luck + Blessings + Opportunity Meet with Patrece M. Lucas

    Season 2, Episode 35: Where Luck + Blessings + Opportunity Meet with Patrece M. Lucas

    Episode 35 invites Detroit's very own #communitycounselor Patrece M. Lucas, MS, LPC.

    Patrece is a licensed Mental Health Counselor and serves as a community counselor in Detroit and its surrounding communities.  She is in private practice as a counselor, wellness partner and mediator at her agency called indigo transitions.

    indigo transitions is about assisting the INDIGO (person) transition and adjusts to functioning in this social construct wholly as THEY ARE...At indigo transitions, Patrece assists clients as they PREPARE for, MANIFEST, and begin to LIVE their best lives. Patrece also provides counseling services as a Business Coach, Nationally Recognized Speaker, Trainer, Facilitator, Corporate Team Builder, and Healing Partner.

    In Episode 35 Community Counselor Patrece Lucas gives us a glimpse of what makes her the perfect counselor for those going through change in their lives. Lucas truly is a transition expert having navigated multiple transitions in her own life. She shares with me several big leaps in her own life and how each time she was able to land on her feet. The greatest lesson from our conversation is learning to say to 'yes' to the things that align with your personal purpose even when it simply would be easier to say 'no.'

    Patrece specializes in providing culturally specific counseling and creating safe healing spaces for African, Black, and other indigenous and BIPOC communities.

    You can connect with Patrece via
    CoffeewithaCounselor@gmail.com
    indigo transitions 

    Season 2, Episode 33: When the Unexpected Community is Where You Heal Most

    Season 2, Episode 33: When the Unexpected Community is Where You Heal Most

    Episode 33 is a Millennial Theologian Takeover!

    I am so grateful to welcome theologian Jasmine Logan back on That Social Work Lady along with her colleague Jada Williams.

    Jada Williams is in her fourth year of the dual JD/MDiv program at Wake Forest University. She holds a Bachelor of Arts in History from Young Harris College, where she was a Division II NCAA basketball player and heavily involved in other campus organizations and clubs ranging from Greek life to religious life to residence life. Jada is a certified beekeeper, began her own cheesecake business in 2020, and is a volunteer youth basketball coach in her free time.

    To say that Williams is a 21st century Renaissance woman is an understatement!

    During episode 33, Williams and Logan take us on a journey of how to build community in spaces that are not necessarily inviting. Williams goes so far as to express that community is not just a people but is also a place and a mindset. Further pushing the envelop of community as a stagnant location, Williams helps us gain a deeper understanding of the radical nature of community and community building. The most surprising element? How unexpected community can be a place where you heal.

    Co-host for this episode is Jasmine “Jazz” Logan. Jazz is a third-year student at Wake Forest University School of Divinity. Jazz is from Arizona but most recently lived in Los Angeles, California, before attending WFU School of Divinity. Jazz has aspirations of becoming an ordained minister (denomination pending) and has a passion for teaching the next generation that they are beloved.

    Learn more about Wake Forest University here.
    Correction: AAU is the Amateur Athletic Union. Learn more about AAU leagues and locations here.

    Season 2, Episode 31: The Road to Divinity (School) with Jasmine Logan

    Season 2, Episode 31: The Road to Divinity (School) with Jasmine Logan

    That Social Work Lady welcomes Jasmine (Jazz) Logan to the studio for Episode 31.

    In Episode 31, millennial theologian Jasmine Logan and I delve into how the contemporary church has outed itself as a the white supremacist christian church of America. Logan holds no punches in her description of the ways the religion of a 'color blind' Jesus does harm to children and youth in the church who do not happen to be white or male or heterosexual. Some may call her ideas radical. Other call them in direct alignment with the actual teachings of the historical Christ.

    Jazz's take on religion, spirituality and Christianity  is eye opening and jaw dropping. Listening to Jazz gave me insight into why so many millennials have left the church. She also gives insight into how some millennials are leaving behind the religious practices of their childhood for an inclusive spiritualism that fuels their social activism.

    Jasmine “Jazz” Logan (she/her) is a third-year student at Wake Forest University School of Divinity. Jazz is from Arizona but most recently lived in Los Angeles, California, before attending WFU School of Divinity. Jazz has aspirations of becoming an ordained minister (denomination pending) and has a passion for teaching the next generation that they are beloved. Jazz will join That Social Work Lady Podcast as cohost for Episodes 33 - 34. 

    Season 2, Episode 27: Writing Between the Lines with Author B. Angela Redd

    Season 2, Episode 27: Writing Between the Lines with Author B. Angela Redd

    For Episode 27, That Social Work Lady welcomes author B. Angela Redd to the studio to discuss community, family, and her writing process.

    Since the age of twelve years old Redd has believed she was destined to be a writer after completing her first play and corralling neighborhood kids to read for parts, study their lines, and show up on time daily for rehearsal. Her passion for writing never ceased throughout the years.  It would be thirty years before Redd put family, career, and life on pause, faced down the paralyzing fear and self-doubt she’d known from years of low self-esteem and mustered the courage to do what she knew was her God-given assignment - write.

    B. Angela Redd realized her dream on April 29, 2022, when she published her first novel, Willfully Blind. A literary fiction writer to her core, she masterfully seized and conveyed the depths of her characters through a story both complex and thematic. With a three-tier Bachelor of Arts degree in Journalism, Political Science, and Sociology from the University of Michigan- Dearborn, B. Angela Redd’s background lends her passion for writing, political and social justice, and mental wellness. She has always retained a heart for those struggling with mental illness, hence her decision to work for a community mental health agency advocating for vulnerable adults struggling with mental illness and developmental disabilities for the past eighteen years.

    Follow B. Angela Redd for more:
    www.bangelaredd.com

    Season 2, Episode 25: Community Building is a Family Affair with Cohost Yvonne Jones

    Season 2, Episode 25: Community Building is a Family Affair with Cohost Yvonne Jones

    Social Activist Yvonne Jones is back in the studio for Episode 25. This time she welcomes three guests: Mrs. Emma Steward, Educator Shirley Roberson-Presley, and Dr. Penny Logan.

    Each of these women are not only members of Mrs. Jones’ family but as community builders have been working to better neighborhoods and families in the Black Community for generations.

    In this candid conversation social activist Jones talks with Community Mother Emma Steward, Educator Shirley Roberson-Presley and Dr. Penny Logan to share what community means to them as well as the ways they have been work to preserve the African legacies of community and family inherited from our ancestors.

    Mrs. Emma Steward is a nonagenarian living in Hot Springs, AR who continues to do her part to infuse care and integrity in her community and especially works at ensuring her church is well taken care of.

    Educator Shirley Roberson-Presley has been teaching revolutionary math concepts since the 1980’s. She makes her home and community in northern Louisiana.

    Dr. Penny Logan received her Ph.D. from the University of Texas - Austin. She is a fierce advocate for nontraditional students and a proponent of community college as a gateway to personal advancement.

    Season 2, Episode 24: Talking History, Influence & Activism with Yvonne Jones and Nehanda Green

    Season 2, Episode 24: Talking History, Influence & Activism with Yvonne Jones and Nehanda Green

    Episode 24, Social Activist Yvonne Jones co-host for continuation of our mini series #mamaknowscommunity.

    Mrs. Jones is a lifetime Detroit resident.  She spent her formatives years during the turmoil of Civil Rights Movement and has first hand experience with the Detroit Rebellion of 1967. She is unashamed of being a direct benefactor of Affirmative Action and the advances made by the Civil Rights Movement. In her second episode as co-host, she continues her conversation with Pan African Activist Nehanda Green. Ms. Green is the mother of one adult daughter and two granddaughters. She has both an undergraduate degree and a  Masters in Public Administration. She is a long time Pan African Political Activist and has traveled extensively through North America, Europe and Asia.  But Ms. Green's favorite destination is Africa. She is the author of five children's books and a City of Detroit retiree where she worked as an accountant.

    In this episode Mrs. Jones and Ms. Green share the individuals and movements that inspire their community work. Beginning with an open conversation about Marcus Garvey, we discover that Ms. Green has a direct link to Garveyite movement. Mrs. Jones likewise shares her love of the radical nonviolent philosophy of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Together they offer a life curriculum on African activism everyone should become familiar with, here are just a few names they dropped in hopes that you will research and learn more:

    Marcus Garvey
    Richard Allen
    Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.
    Kwame Nkrumah
    Kwame Ture
    W.E.B. DuBoise
    Booker T. Washington
    Ghanaian Independence
    African United
    All African People’s Revolutionary Party (post SNCC)
    el Hajj Malik el Shabazz (Malcolm X)
    Harriet Tubman
    Sojourner Truth
    Fannie Lou Hamer
    Shirley Chisholm

    Season 2, Episode 23: Yvonne Jones Co-host, #MamaKnowsCommunity with Pan African Activist Nehanda Green

    Season 2, Episode 23: Yvonne Jones Co-host, #MamaKnowsCommunity with Pan African Activist Nehanda Green

    In Episode 23, introduces Yvonne Jones as co-host for That Social Work Lady Podcast's mini series #mamaknowscommunity.

    Mrs. Jones is a lifetime Detroit resident.  She spent her formatives years during the turmoil of Civil Rights Movement and has first hand experience with the Detroit Rebellion of 1967. She is unashamed of being a direct benefactor of Affirmative Action and the advances made by the Civil Rights Movement. In her debut episode as co-host, she invites Pan African Activist Nehanda Green to the studio. Ms. Green is the mother of one adult daughter and two granddaughters. She has both an undergraduate degree and a  Masters in Public Administration. She is a long time Pan African Political Activist And has traveled extensively through North America, Europe and Asia.  But Ms. Green's favorite destination is Africa. She is the author of five children's books and a City of Detroit retiree where she worked as an accountant.

    What a treat that Episode 23 allows me to be in conversation with two dynamic women who have spent their lives working to build community and work for the liberation of Black people throughout the diaspora. Ms. Green shares her philosophy of Pan Africanism, while Mrs. Jones focuses her energy on the eradication of the oppression of Black people in America.

    Together, they helped build a preschool in Freetown, Sierra Leone and have sustained that school for a generation. How? Through small donations from their community members based in Detroit, MI, Ms. Green and Mrs. Jones have held up and help grow the Mawina Kouyate Early Education Center.  They liken their dedication to help build the school among their other community building efforts to the #kitchenpolitics of women like Georgia Gilmore.

    Georgia Gilmore was a Montgomery, GA cook, midwife and activist whose secret kitchen fed the civil rights movement. For more information about her story check out: Meet the Fearless Cook Who Secretly Fed - And Funded - The Civil Rights Movement.

    What to learn more about Pan Africanism?
    The Pan African Movement
    The History of Pan Africanism

    Season 2, Episode 21: Mamapreneurship is Tiffany Funderburk’s Way of Life

    Season 2, Episode 21: Mamapreneurship is Tiffany Funderburk’s Way of Life

    On Episode 21, I got to share the mic with entrepreneur Tiffany Funderburk.

    During our candid conversation,  Tiffany Funderburk shares some of the tenets of her philosophy on parenting and entrepreneurship. Truly she offers a master class on nurturing a marriage while raising a blended family. Hint: her definition of community is the foundation.

    Born in Cali, but raised in Detroit, Tiffany attended Detroit Public Schools. After high school she attended Western Michigan University. While at WMU she joined the U.S. Army and became an active member of the National Guard.  She has been married for 15 and is the mother of a blended family of 7 children! Tiffany is also a doting grandmother. After 14 years as a homeschooling mother, Tiffany decided to take a big leap of faith. 3 years ago an opportunity opened up for her to pursue ownership of a Cold Stone Creamery franchise. Although the odds were against her (and more than a few small business loan rejections) Tiffany persevered. She is now the owner of that Cold Stone Creamery franchise, 1 of only 2 black  Cold Stone Creamery franchisees in the state of Michigan.

    Season 2, Episode 10: The One Where I Talk About Bruno

    Season 2, Episode 10: The One Where I Talk About Bruno

    I'm in the studio solo dolo for this episode and I'm talking about Bruno!

    Every family has secrets. Some of those secrets are merely private things that truly aren't anyone's business outside of the family. But there are other secrets that are truly damaging and traumatic. There are secrets that hurt, harm and kill. 

    Watching Disney's Encanto brought home to me the impact that generational trauma has on families, particularly Black families. Many family members carry the shame of their generational trauma without zero understanding of the origin of the trauma and why they function the way they do in society.

    Brene Brown, TED talk famous social worker and renown shame researcher says, "I define shame as the intensely painful feeling or experience of believing that we are flawed and therefore unworthy of love and belonging—something we’ve experienced, done, or failed to do makes us unworthy of connection."

    Bruno, a character in Encanto, embodies his family's shame. The shame is directly related to their trauma. Bruno is the hidden secret. The crazy thing is millions of families across America have a Bruno! In our families Bruno can be male or female. They may be a drunk or someone with mental illness. At the end of the day, however, Bruno holds the family shame and because he holds the family shame the rest of the family can 'function' in the larger society.

    Whew!

    So that's what we diving into in Episode 10.

    For more information on Brene Brown's shame research check out:
    https://brenebrown.com/articles/2013/01/15/shame-v-guilt/

    Also check out the book: You Are Your Best Thing edited by Brene Brown and Tarana Burke

    Season 2, Episode 5: Lisa Lipscomb Builds Community On Purpose in Her Classrooms and Beyond

    Season 2, Episode 5: Lisa Lipscomb Builds Community On Purpose in Her Classrooms and Beyond

    In Episode 5, I got to welcome Lisa Lipscomb to the the studio.

    Lisa earned a Bachelor of Arts from the University of Michigan-Dearborn, National Board Certification in Literacy: Reading & Language Arts, a Master in the Art of Teaching from Marygrove College, and a Master of Learning Technologies and Instructional Design from Utah State University. She is a Detroit native where she attended St. Mary's and is a graduate of Redford High School. She is a veteran educator. Working in public schools for nearly 3 decades. Lisa has personally witnessed a shift in education.

    As an educator, Lisa has been intentionally building community in her classrooms for decades. In this interview she offers her unique formula for building community in the classroom and beyond. Her secret is she believes every person in community has something to contribute. Every student in Lisa's classroom is made to feel that they have a voice and a say in how their community will work. And that works! Even in the virtual school setting!

    Learn more about Lisa's initiative by following her on social media:
    https://www.facebook.com/LisaLipscombLLL

    And check out her website: Something New!

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