"What I desire most is to end the suffering within Black bodies, not to sedate it or temporarily relieve it, but to eradicate it." #BlavityOpEd by @TheaMonyee https://t.co/kW0hQ9J6ZM
On this episode of Sound Advice, we asked therapist and successful entrepreneur @TheaMonyee what she’d do differently if she could start her business all over again. Have a listen to her insightful answer.
#SFState / #SFSU scholars.
Join us for the Hold Us Sacred series facilitated by @TheaMonyee - discussions on how we see the sacred within.
Tuesday, 3/29, 4-5pm PST.
Unpacking Ancestral Inheritance
RSVP: https://t.co/rnr48pETLk.
Giveaways for 1st 25 registered and attending.
“This is not about me. This is about marginalized people in Harlem that need to heal from pain.” @questlove accepts the Best Documentary Feature Oscar for 'Summer of Soul': https://t.co/DYxg12anbB
some of y’all should have gotten slapped a long time ago and never did so now you’re on Twitter using this recent incident as an excuse to be anti-Black.
may the hands find you too.
The coping isn’t the healing…it’s the surviving. And if we don’t unravel this piece and continue to give comedy a grand pass…we don’t allow the gift of laughter to heal in the beautiful and powerful ways we know it can.
It’s time to talk about healing in comedy.
Many comedians share their backstory and cite traumas and childhood challenges, often violent on some level, and how they used comedy to survive it.
But that doesn’t mean the pain from the trauma heals.
It’s time to look at the ways comedy and comedians who reach levels of success where the harm can have greater impact, need to seek healing, and where they themselves can become the bullies they once used laughter to survive.
Buried in all the madness is that Will Smith's win makes him only the 5th Black actor to win the Oscar for Best Actor, and the first in 16 years, since Forest Whitaker won for "The Last King of Scotland" in 2006. #Oscars