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  • Reimagining Financial Wellbeing in Black Communities
    2026/01/22

    Financial wellbeing isn’t just about how much money you make — it’s about stability, security, and freedom of choice. In this episode of Reimagining Black Health, Dr. Melicia Whitt-Glover explores the dimension of financial wellbeing, examining what it truly means for Black individuals and families to move from surviving to thriving.

    Guests Stephanie Yates, Executive Director of the UAB Regions Institute for Financial Education, and Darrius Peace, master hairstylist, entrepreneur, and community leader, unpack the real barriers to financial health — from systemic racism and the racial wealth gap to everyday challenges around education, access, and generational wealth.

    Together, they examine:

    ● What it means to financially thrive beyond income alone
    ● How historic and systemic exclusion created today’s racial wealth gap
    ● Why Black Wall Street mattered — and what it teaches us today
    ● The role of land ownership, estate planning, and generational transfers
    ● How fear, lack of information, and missing paperwork lead to asset loss
    ● Why community, collective action, and shared knowledge are essential to financial liberation
    ● Practical steps individuals can take this week to strengthen their financial wellbeing


    This episode is a call to reclaim financial agency — through education, community connection, and intentional planning — and to reimagine financial wellbeing as a collective pathway toward freedom, dignity, and long-term health.

    EPISODE CHAPTERS — Financial Wellbeing

    00:00 — Financial Wellbeing Defined: Surviving vs. Thriving
    01:00 — Meet Stephanie Yates & Darrius Peace
    02:00 — Stability, Flow, and Financial Confidence
    05:00 — The Racial Wealth Gap Explained
    09:00 — Redlining, Exclusion, and Predatory Lending
    12:30 — Black Wall Street and Lessons from the Past
    17:00 — Why Fear and Policy Block Rebuilding
    19:00 — Keeping Wealth in the Community
    22:00 — Land Ownership and Generational Transfers
    26:00 — Estate Planning and Lost Assets
    30:00 — Community, Trust, and Financial Conversations
    35:00 — Education as Empowerment
    41:00 — One Action You Can Take This Week
    48:00 — Closing


    💡 Connect and Learn More

    Visit councilbh.org to learn more about the Council on Black Health and its mission to advance health equity and reimagine what wellness looks like in Black communities.

    Follow us for future episodes, resources, and conversations that center healing, joy, and thriving.


    Join us in achieving equity for generations. Donate to help the Council on Black Health drive lasting impact!

    https://councilbh.app.neoncrm.com/forms/donate



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    49 分
  • Emotional Wellbeing and the Courage to Feel
    2026/01/08

    Emotional wellbeing is more than “being okay.” It’s about how we process stress, set boundaries, heal generational trauma, and find peace in a world that often demands constant resilience from Black communities.

    In this episode of Reimagining Black Health, Dr. Melicia Whitt-Glover explores the dimension of emotional wellbeing and why it’s foundational to thriving, not just surviving. She’s joined by Jahkazia Richardson, a clinician specializing in ancestral and decolonized therapy practices, and Malik Washington, a mental health advocate encouraging Black men to engage with therapy and emotional care.

    Together, they have an honest, grounded conversation about rest, healing, and what it really takes to support emotional health in everyday life.

    In this episode, you’ll hear about:

    • What emotional wellbeing actually means beyond clinical definitions

    • The “soft life” conversation and why rest can be an act of resistance

    • Healing generational trauma and letting go of survival-based behaviors

    • Why traditional, Eurocentric therapy models often fall short for Black communities



    This episode is an invitation to slow down, reflect, and rethink what emotional health looks like when it’s rooted in truth, culture, and care.

    Episode Chapters — Emotional Wellbeing
    00:00 — What Is Emotional Wellbeing?
    01:00 — Meet Jahkazia Richardson & Malik Washington
    02:30 — The “Soft Life” and Choosing Rest
    04:45 — Generational Trauma and Survival Mode
    07:30 — Black Men and Mental Health Stigma
    10:00 — Therapy, Fit, and Finding the Right Support
    14:00 — Decolonized Therapy and Ancestral Healing
    18:30 — Emotions, Expression, and Cultural Expectations
    22:00 — Stress, Policing, and Everyday Trauma
    27:00 — Community, Culture, and Belonging
    31:00 — Coping Skills and Healthy Release
    35:00 — What Thriving Emotionally Really Looks Like
    38:00 — One Simple Step to Support Emotional Wellbeing
    41:00 — Closing Reflections


    💡 Connect and Learn More
    Visit councilbh.org to learn more about the Council on Black Health and its mission to advance health equity and reimagine what wellness looks like in Black communities.


    Follow us for future episodes, resources, and conversations that center healing, joy, and thriving.

    Join us in achieving equity for generations. Donate to help the Council on Black Health drive lasting impact!
    https://councilbh.app.neoncrm.com/forms/donate


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    49 分
  • Reimagining Occupational Wellbeing: Rest & Liberation
    2025/12/18


    Grinding isn’t wellness — and rest isn’t laziness. In this episode of Reimagining Black Health, Dr. Melicia Whitt-Glover explores the dimension of occupational wellbeing, asking what it truly means for Black people to thrive in the spaces where we work, lead, create, and care for others.


    Guests Kelsie Bonaparte and Dr. Monique Johnson join the conversation for a grounded, honest look at how hustle culture has shaped our health, why productivity has been glorified at the expense of rest, and how Black communities can reclaim joy, agency, and balance as essential parts of work-life wellbeing.


    Together, they examine:


    ● How grind culture disguises itself as “self-improvement” and “wellness”
    ● Why the pandemic forced a reckoning with our relationship to labor
    ● How rest, autonomy, and boundaries protect our mental and physical health
    ● Why optimal health must include joy, community, and meaningful purpose
    ● Practical ways to rethink your workday and redefine success on your own terms


    This episode is an invitation to reimagine work — not as a measure of worth, but as one dimension of a full, liberated, and healthy life. Because optimal Black health includes rest, play, purpose, and the freedom to choose how we show up.

    EPISODE CHAPTERS — Occupational Wellbeing


    00:00 — What Does Occupational Wellbeing Really Mean?
    00:30 — The Rise of Hustle Culture
    01:15 — How “Wellness Challenges” Reinforce Overwork
    03:00 — Rest as Resistance
    05:00 — Is a Shift Happening Post-Pandemic?
    07:00 — Redefining Wellness Outside the Medical Model
    10:00 — Joy, Agency, and Autonomy at Work
    14:00 — Balancing Roles Without Burning Out
    18:00 — Boundaries, Intention, and Working Smarter
    23:00 — Giving Yourself Grace
    27:00 — One Action You Can Take This Week
    38:00 — Closing

    💡 Connect and Learn More


    Visit councilbh.org to learn more about the Council on Black Health’s mission to advance health equity and reshape the future of Black wellness.


    Follow us for future episodes, resources, and tools to help reimagine what it means to be well.

    Join us in achieving equity for generations. Donate to help the Council on Black Health drive lasting impact!
    https://councilbh.app.neoncrm.com/forms/donate


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    43 分
  • Rethinking Social Wellbeing in Black Communities
    2025/12/04

    Loneliness isn’t just a feeling — it’s a public health crisis. In this episode of Reimagining Black Health, Dr. Melicia Whitt-Glover digs into the dimension of social wellbeing, exploring why real connection is as vital to our health as sleep, nutrition, and movement.


    Guests Michele Paul, creator of Let’s Get Social Raleigh and founder of the Adult Recess movement, and Chelsey Reese, therapist and somatic practitioner, break down how community, joy, play, and vulnerability shape our emotional and physical health.


    Together, they examine:

    • Why loneliness raises the risks of heart disease, stroke, dementia, and early death

    • Why joy is a birthright, not something we have to earn

    • What “being seen” truly feels like — and why it's deeper than just being around people

    • How play and community events can spark radical healing

    • Practical, simple steps anyone can take this week to strengthen their own social wellbeing

    This episode is an invitation to step outside, reconnect, and remember that we’re designed for community — and that connection is a core part of thriving.



    EPISODE CHAPTERS — Social Wellbeing

    00:00 — Joy as a Birthright

    00:26 — What Is Social Wellbeing?

    01:00 — Meet Michele Paul & Chelsey Reese

    01:20 — Loneliness as a Public Health Crisis

    03:00 — Systemic Barriers to Connection

    03:35 — Social Media’s Role

    04:45 — Is Loneliness Really That Serious?

    05:30 — Ubuntu and Community

    07:00 — Adult Recess & the Power of Play

    09:00 — Rethinking Optimal Health

    10:00 — Inside Chelsey’s Therapy Practice

    11:00 — How Disconnection Shows Up in the Body

    14:30 — The Hardest Step: Getting Out of the House

    18:00 — Creating Safe, Welcoming Spaces

    23:00 — What It Means to Be Seen

    27:00 — Why Adults Lose Touch With Joy

    31:00 — Teens, Tech, and Isolation

    36:00 — One Simple Step to Improve Social Wellbeing

    38:00 — Closing

    💡 Connect and Learn More

    Visit councilbh.org to learn more about the Council on Black Health’s mission to advance health equity and reshape the future of Black wellness.

    Follow us for future episodes, resources, and updates on how you can join the movement to reimagine what it means to be well.

    Join us in achieving equity for generations. Donate to help the Council on Black Health drive lasting impact!
    https://councilbh.app.neoncrm.com/forms/donate


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    39 分
  • What Does Optimal Black Health Really Look Like?
    2025/11/20

    What does it mean to be truly well — not just free from illness, but whole, joyful, and liberated?
    In this premiere episode of Reimagining Black Health, Dr. Melicia Whitt-Glover brings together a dynamic panel — physician and activist Dr. L. Toni Lewis, wellness advocate Jerica Robinson, and trainer Antoine Hudson — to unpack how health extends beyond numbers on a chart.


    Together, they explore how rest, joy, boundaries, and community care are central to Black wellness. From grind culture to mental health, from body scans to Beyoncé, this conversation challenges traditional health models and celebrates a vision of optimal health rooted in freedom.

    ⏱️ Episode Chapters

    00:00 – Introduction: Redefining “health” beyond the medical model
    02:00 – The Wellness Trap: Are challenges like “75 Hard” helping or harming?
    06:30 – Anti-Grind Culture: Dr. Toni Lewis on rest as resistance
    10:00 – Joy and Liberation: Why community, play, and happiness matter
    17:00 – Defining Optimal Health: Perspectives across generations
    29:00 – Decentering Grind Culture: Setting boundaries and working smarter
    39:00 – Balancing Roles: The cost of “doing it all”
    44:00 – Takeaway Round: One thing you can do this week to move toward optimal health
    50:00 – Closing Reflections: A win is a win — give yourself grace


    💡 Connect and Learn More

    Visit councilbh.org to learn more about the Council on Black Health’s mission to advance health equity and reshape the future of Black wellness.
    Follow us for future episodes, resources, and updates on how you can join the movement to reimagine what it means to be well.

    Join us in achieving equity for generations. Donate to help the Council on Black Health drive lasting impact!
    https://councilbh.app.neoncrm.com/forms/donate

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    51 分