Evolve & Grow
Begin your journey toward healing and self-discovery with curated content to nurture your mind, body, and spirit. From mental wellness tips to self-care routines and growth strategies, explore tools and insights designed to help you overcome challenges and embrace personal transformation. It’s time to heal, grow, and thrive!
The Body At Ease: Remembering That Everything Doesn't Have to be a Fight
By Kandace Kyere, MSW/LSW
A few years ago, a friend and I were talking about how, as people who live in Black bodies, we often struggle to accept that not everything has to be a fight. So much of what it has historically meant to be Black and female—both across generations and across the globe—has been to fight. Fight for our freedom. Fight to be seen, fight to be heard, fight to achieve, fight to be worthy, and fight to be equal.
This constant fight can be exhausting and can activate an ongoing stress response in our bodies. This is especially true when navigating predominantly white institutions, as explored in the research study White People Stress Me Out All the Time: Black Students define racial trauma.
What is your relationship to fighting, and how has it impacted your body, mind, and emotions?
Dr. Resmaa Menakem, therapist and author of My Grandmother’s Hands: Racialized Trauma and the Pathway to Mending Our Hearts and Bodies (2017), further confirms how perpetual fight-mode takes a toll on the Black body. In his book, he offers a robust selection of body-centered practices that can help you to recenter yourself. Menakem reminds readers:
“White-body supremacy doesn’t live just in our thinking brains. It lives and breathes in our bodies. Our deepest emotions involve the activation of a single bodily structure: our soul nerve (or vagus nerve). This nerve is connected to our lizard brain, which is concerned solely with survival and protection. Our lizard brain only has four basic commands: rest, fight, flee, or freeze.” (p. 25).
Becoming Her, Again: Returning to the Version of You That You Miss
By Erika Brooks, Licensed Therapist
Celebrate Your Progress Even When You're Not Exactly Where You Want to Be Yet
By Lynnette Price, MS Psychology
Releasing the Pressure to Stay the Same: You Don’t Have to Be Who You Were in Your 20s
Spirituality in Everyday Life: Mindful Moments and Practices
By Joy Ewing, Licensed Therapist
Walking for Healing: How Moving My Body Helped Me Return to Myself
By Requel Jasmine
Redefining Success and Happiness: How Letting Go of Societal Expectations Can Lead to Joy
By Erika Brooks, Licensed Therapist






