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    <title>Reimagining Black Health</title>
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    <description>Reimagining Black Health is a podcast dedicated to advancing Black health equity by exploring critical health topics through the lens of the Eight Dimensions of Well-Being—emotional, physical, occupational, social, spiritual, intellectual, environmental, and financial.
Brought to you by The Council on Black Health, the show highlights experts, advocates, and community members who are reimagining what it means to thrive and live safe, healthy, and happy lives. Through insightful conversations, we amplify the voices of those driving meaningful change in Black health and wellness.

https://councilbh.org/

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</description>
    <copyright>© 2025 Council on Black Health. All rights reserved.</copyright>
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    <pubDate>Thu, 02 Apr 2026 11:19:46 -0400</pubDate>
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    <link>https://councilbh.org/</link>
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      <title>Reimagining Black Health</title>
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    <itunes:author>Council on Black Health</itunes:author>
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    <itunes:summary>Reimagining Black Health is a podcast dedicated to advancing Black health equity by exploring critical health topics through the lens of the Eight Dimensions of Well-Being—emotional, physical, occupational, social, spiritual, intellectual, environmental, and financial.
Brought to you by The Council on Black Health, the show highlights experts, advocates, and community members who are reimagining what it means to thrive and live safe, healthy, and happy lives. Through insightful conversations, we amplify the voices of those driving meaningful change in Black health and wellness.

https://councilbh.org/

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</itunes:summary>
    <itunes:subtitle>Reimagining Black Health is a podcast dedicated to advancing Black health equity by exploring critical health topics through the lens of the Eight Dimensions of Well-Being—emotional, physical, occupational, social, spiritual, intellectual, environmental, and financial.</itunes:subtitle>
    <itunes:keywords>Black health, health equity, wellness, mental health, optimal health, public health, Council on Black Health, Dr. Melicia Whitt-Glover</itunes:keywords>
    <itunes:owner>
      <itunes:name>Walk West</itunes:name>
      <itunes:email>content-studio@walkwest.com</itunes:email>
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    <itunes:complete>No</itunes:complete>
    <itunes:explicit>No</itunes:explicit>
    <item>
      <title>Reimagining Men’s Health: Breaking Silence, Building Strength</title>
      <itunes:episode>10</itunes:episode>
      <podcast:episode>10</podcast:episode>
      <itunes:title>Reimagining Men’s Health: Breaking Silence, Building Strength</itunes:title>
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        <![CDATA[<p>In this episode of <em>Reimagining Black Health</em>, Dr. Melicia Whitt-Glover leads an honest and layered conversation about Black men’s health—what it means, what gets in the way, and what it takes to move from survival to thriving.</p><p><br>For many Black men, health is shaped by more than just individual choices. It’s influenced by history, identity, societal pressure, and lived experience. From mental health stigma to fear of the healthcare system, the barriers are real—and often unspoken.</p><p>Dr. Melicia is joined by:</p><ul><li><strong>Dr. Ailton Santonio Coleman</strong>, researcher and expert in Black masculinity and health</li><li><strong>Arthur “AJ” Johns</strong>, community health worker and living example of transformation</li></ul><p>Together, they unpack how masculinity, culture, and systemic realities shape health behaviors—and how community, accountability, and intention can create lasting change.</p><p><br>This episode moves between research and real life, connecting the dots between identity, mental health, physical health, and the power of community support.</p><p><strong>In this episode, we explore:</strong></p><ul><li>How Black masculinity influences health decisions and behaviors</li><li>The hidden role of fear—not weakness—in avoiding healthcare</li><li>Why mental health challenges often go undiagnosed in Black men<p></p></li></ul><p><strong>Episode Chapters </strong></p><p>00:00 — Defining Health and Masculinity on Our Own Terms<br> 01:00 — Meet Dr. Ailton Coleman &amp; AJ Johns<br> 02:00 — What Is Black Masculinity?<br> 04:00 — What Does Thriving Look Like for Black Men?<br> 05:00 — Fear, Misinformation, and Avoiding the Doctor<br> 09:00 — How Society Shapes Health Behavior<br> 12:00 — The Stress of Providing and Its Health Costs<br> 15:00 — Losing Safe Spaces for Black Men<br> 16:00 — AJ’s Story: From 500+ Pounds to Transformation<br> 18:00 — The Turning Point: Data, Accountability, and Embarrassment<br> 20:00 — Learning Health from Scratch<br> 22:00 — Small Changes That Led to Big Results<br> 24:00 — Health as Legacy, Not Just Wealth<br> 25:00 — Mental Health and the Fear of Seeking Help<br> 27:00 — Why “Getting Help” Can Feel Dangerous<br> 29:00 — The Role of Community and Brotherhood<br> 31:00 — Giving Back and Becoming an Ambassador for Health<br> 34:00 — Why Safe Spaces Matter for Black Men<br> 36:00 — One Thing You Can Do Today<br> 38:00 — Closing Thoughts</p><p><br></p><p>💡 Connect and Learn More</p><p>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.</p><p><br></p><p>Follow and subscribe to <em>Reimagining Black Health</em> for more conversations that challenge us to think differently about what it truly means to thrive.</p><p><br></p><p>Join us in achieving equity for generations. Donate to help the Council on Black Health drive lasting impact!</p><p>https://councilbh.app.neoncrm.com/forms/donate</p><p><br></p>]]>
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        <![CDATA[<p>In this episode of <em>Reimagining Black Health</em>, Dr. Melicia Whitt-Glover leads an honest and layered conversation about Black men’s health—what it means, what gets in the way, and what it takes to move from survival to thriving.</p><p><br>For many Black men, health is shaped by more than just individual choices. It’s influenced by history, identity, societal pressure, and lived experience. From mental health stigma to fear of the healthcare system, the barriers are real—and often unspoken.</p><p>Dr. Melicia is joined by:</p><ul><li><strong>Dr. Ailton Santonio Coleman</strong>, researcher and expert in Black masculinity and health</li><li><strong>Arthur “AJ” Johns</strong>, community health worker and living example of transformation</li></ul><p>Together, they unpack how masculinity, culture, and systemic realities shape health behaviors—and how community, accountability, and intention can create lasting change.</p><p><br>This episode moves between research and real life, connecting the dots between identity, mental health, physical health, and the power of community support.</p><p><strong>In this episode, we explore:</strong></p><ul><li>How Black masculinity influences health decisions and behaviors</li><li>The hidden role of fear—not weakness—in avoiding healthcare</li><li>Why mental health challenges often go undiagnosed in Black men<p></p></li></ul><p><strong>Episode Chapters </strong></p><p>00:00 — Defining Health and Masculinity on Our Own Terms<br> 01:00 — Meet Dr. Ailton Coleman &amp; AJ Johns<br> 02:00 — What Is Black Masculinity?<br> 04:00 — What Does Thriving Look Like for Black Men?<br> 05:00 — Fear, Misinformation, and Avoiding the Doctor<br> 09:00 — How Society Shapes Health Behavior<br> 12:00 — The Stress of Providing and Its Health Costs<br> 15:00 — Losing Safe Spaces for Black Men<br> 16:00 — AJ’s Story: From 500+ Pounds to Transformation<br> 18:00 — The Turning Point: Data, Accountability, and Embarrassment<br> 20:00 — Learning Health from Scratch<br> 22:00 — Small Changes That Led to Big Results<br> 24:00 — Health as Legacy, Not Just Wealth<br> 25:00 — Mental Health and the Fear of Seeking Help<br> 27:00 — Why “Getting Help” Can Feel Dangerous<br> 29:00 — The Role of Community and Brotherhood<br> 31:00 — Giving Back and Becoming an Ambassador for Health<br> 34:00 — Why Safe Spaces Matter for Black Men<br> 36:00 — One Thing You Can Do Today<br> 38:00 — Closing Thoughts</p><p><br></p><p>💡 Connect and Learn More</p><p>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.</p><p><br></p><p>Follow and subscribe to <em>Reimagining Black Health</em> for more conversations that challenge us to think differently about what it truly means to thrive.</p><p><br></p><p>Join us in achieving equity for generations. Donate to help the Council on Black Health drive lasting impact!</p><p>https://councilbh.app.neoncrm.com/forms/donate</p><p><br></p>]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <pubDate>Thu, 02 Apr 2026 10:58:55 -0400</pubDate>
      <author>Council on Black Health</author>
      <enclosure url="https://media.transistor.fm/64598f09/67fe24e6.mp3" length="57730804" type="audio/mpeg"/>
      <itunes:author>Council on Black Health</itunes:author>
      <itunes:duration>2400</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>
        <![CDATA[<p>In this episode of <em>Reimagining Black Health</em>, Dr. Melicia Whitt-Glover leads an honest and layered conversation about Black men’s health—what it means, what gets in the way, and what it takes to move from survival to thriving.</p><p><br>For many Black men, health is shaped by more than just individual choices. It’s influenced by history, identity, societal pressure, and lived experience. From mental health stigma to fear of the healthcare system, the barriers are real—and often unspoken.</p><p>Dr. Melicia is joined by:</p><ul><li><strong>Dr. Ailton Santonio Coleman</strong>, researcher and expert in Black masculinity and health</li><li><strong>Arthur “AJ” Johns</strong>, community health worker and living example of transformation</li></ul><p>Together, they unpack how masculinity, culture, and systemic realities shape health behaviors—and how community, accountability, and intention can create lasting change.</p><p><br>This episode moves between research and real life, connecting the dots between identity, mental health, physical health, and the power of community support.</p><p><strong>In this episode, we explore:</strong></p><ul><li>How Black masculinity influences health decisions and behaviors</li><li>The hidden role of fear—not weakness—in avoiding healthcare</li><li>Why mental health challenges often go undiagnosed in Black men<p></p></li></ul><p><strong>Episode Chapters </strong></p><p>00:00 — Defining Health and Masculinity on Our Own Terms<br> 01:00 — Meet Dr. Ailton Coleman &amp; AJ Johns<br> 02:00 — What Is Black Masculinity?<br> 04:00 — What Does Thriving Look Like for Black Men?<br> 05:00 — Fear, Misinformation, and Avoiding the Doctor<br> 09:00 — How Society Shapes Health Behavior<br> 12:00 — The Stress of Providing and Its Health Costs<br> 15:00 — Losing Safe Spaces for Black Men<br> 16:00 — AJ’s Story: From 500+ Pounds to Transformation<br> 18:00 — The Turning Point: Data, Accountability, and Embarrassment<br> 20:00 — Learning Health from Scratch<br> 22:00 — Small Changes That Led to Big Results<br> 24:00 — Health as Legacy, Not Just Wealth<br> 25:00 — Mental Health and the Fear of Seeking Help<br> 27:00 — Why “Getting Help” Can Feel Dangerous<br> 29:00 — The Role of Community and Brotherhood<br> 31:00 — Giving Back and Becoming an Ambassador for Health<br> 34:00 — Why Safe Spaces Matter for Black Men<br> 36:00 — One Thing You Can Do Today<br> 38:00 — Closing Thoughts</p><p><br></p><p>💡 Connect and Learn More</p><p>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.</p><p><br></p><p>Follow and subscribe to <em>Reimagining Black Health</em> for more conversations that challenge us to think differently about what it truly means to thrive.</p><p><br></p><p>Join us in achieving equity for generations. Donate to help the Council on Black Health drive lasting impact!</p><p>https://councilbh.app.neoncrm.com/forms/donate</p><p><br></p>]]>
      </itunes:summary>
      <itunes:keywords>Black health, health equity, wellness, mental health, optimal health, public health, Council on Black Health, Dr. Melicia Whitt-Glover</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>No</itunes:explicit>
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    <item>
      <title>Reimagining Women’s Health: From Surviving to Thriving</title>
      <itunes:episode>9</itunes:episode>
      <podcast:episode>9</podcast:episode>
      <itunes:title>Reimagining Women’s Health: From Surviving to Thriving</itunes:title>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
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      <link>https://share.transistor.fm/s/d7de474f</link>
      <description>
        <![CDATA[<p>Women’s health is often reduced to symptoms and quick fixes. But for many Black women, the reality is far more complex.</p><p>In this episode of <em>Reimagining Black Health</em>, Dr. Melicia Whitt-Glover explores what it really means to care for our bodies in a system that often overlooks, dismisses, or misunderstands our experiences. From heavy periods and fibroids to major decisions like hysterectomy, the conversation goes beyond treatment and gets to the root of what’s shaping our health.</p><p><br>Dr. Wynne Brown, OB/GYN and integrative medicine physician, and ShLanda Burton, certified doula trainer and birth equity advocate, unpack the deeper issues — from medical mistrust and misinformation to cultural pressures and environmental exposures — and how they impact Black women across the lifespan.</p><p>Together, they discuss:</p><ul><li>Why women’s health is often misunderstood in 2025</li><li>The myths and “quick fixes” that keep us stuck</li><li>How stress, nutrition, and environment shape reproductive health</li><li>The role of doulas and community in improving outcomes</li><li>What it means to build a trusted care circle</li><li>Simple, practical ways to start listening to your body again</li></ul><p>This episode is a reminder that women’s health is not just clinical — it’s personal, cultural, and deeply connected to how we live every day. And reclaiming it starts with paying attention to what our bodies have been telling us all along.</p><p><strong><br>EPISODE CHAPTERS — Women’s Health<br></strong><br></p><p>00:00 — Opening + Why Women’s Health Is More Complex Than We Think<br> 00:52 — Meet Dr. Wynne Brown &amp; ShLanda Burton<br> 01:50 — What Doulas Do and Why They Matter<br> 04:30 — The Village We’ve Lost in Women’s Health<br> 05:45 — What We’re Getting Wrong About Women’s Health<br> 10:45 — Stress, Rest, and the Impact of Misinformation<br> 14:15 — The Problem with Quick Fixes and Health Trends<br> 18:45 — Food, Nutrition, and Making Better Choices<br> 23:00 — Heavy Periods, Fibroids, and Root Causes<br> 27:00 — Real Solutions: Food, Sleep, and Stress<br> 32:30 — Doulas, Advocacy, and Barriers to Care<br> 38:00 — Building a Trusted Circle of Care<br> 42:30 — Finding the Right Providers and Trusting Your Instincts<br> 46:00 — One Thing You Can Do This Week + Closing</p><p><strong>💡 Connect and Learn More</strong></p><p>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.</p><p><br></p><p>Follow and subscribe to <em>Reimagining Black Health</em> for more conversations that challenge us to think differently about what it truly means to thrive.</p><p><br></p><p>Join us in achieving equity for generations. Donate to help the Council on Black Health drive lasting impact!</p><p>https://councilbh.app.neoncrm.com/forms/donate</p>]]>
      </description>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[<p>Women’s health is often reduced to symptoms and quick fixes. But for many Black women, the reality is far more complex.</p><p>In this episode of <em>Reimagining Black Health</em>, Dr. Melicia Whitt-Glover explores what it really means to care for our bodies in a system that often overlooks, dismisses, or misunderstands our experiences. From heavy periods and fibroids to major decisions like hysterectomy, the conversation goes beyond treatment and gets to the root of what’s shaping our health.</p><p><br>Dr. Wynne Brown, OB/GYN and integrative medicine physician, and ShLanda Burton, certified doula trainer and birth equity advocate, unpack the deeper issues — from medical mistrust and misinformation to cultural pressures and environmental exposures — and how they impact Black women across the lifespan.</p><p>Together, they discuss:</p><ul><li>Why women’s health is often misunderstood in 2025</li><li>The myths and “quick fixes” that keep us stuck</li><li>How stress, nutrition, and environment shape reproductive health</li><li>The role of doulas and community in improving outcomes</li><li>What it means to build a trusted care circle</li><li>Simple, practical ways to start listening to your body again</li></ul><p>This episode is a reminder that women’s health is not just clinical — it’s personal, cultural, and deeply connected to how we live every day. And reclaiming it starts with paying attention to what our bodies have been telling us all along.</p><p><strong><br>EPISODE CHAPTERS — Women’s Health<br></strong><br></p><p>00:00 — Opening + Why Women’s Health Is More Complex Than We Think<br> 00:52 — Meet Dr. Wynne Brown &amp; ShLanda Burton<br> 01:50 — What Doulas Do and Why They Matter<br> 04:30 — The Village We’ve Lost in Women’s Health<br> 05:45 — What We’re Getting Wrong About Women’s Health<br> 10:45 — Stress, Rest, and the Impact of Misinformation<br> 14:15 — The Problem with Quick Fixes and Health Trends<br> 18:45 — Food, Nutrition, and Making Better Choices<br> 23:00 — Heavy Periods, Fibroids, and Root Causes<br> 27:00 — Real Solutions: Food, Sleep, and Stress<br> 32:30 — Doulas, Advocacy, and Barriers to Care<br> 38:00 — Building a Trusted Circle of Care<br> 42:30 — Finding the Right Providers and Trusting Your Instincts<br> 46:00 — One Thing You Can Do This Week + Closing</p><p><strong>💡 Connect and Learn More</strong></p><p>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.</p><p><br></p><p>Follow and subscribe to <em>Reimagining Black Health</em> for more conversations that challenge us to think differently about what it truly means to thrive.</p><p><br></p><p>Join us in achieving equity for generations. Donate to help the Council on Black Health drive lasting impact!</p><p>https://councilbh.app.neoncrm.com/forms/donate</p>]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <pubDate>Thu, 19 Mar 2026 03:00:00 -0400</pubDate>
      <author>Council on Black Health</author>
      <enclosure url="https://media.transistor.fm/d7de474f/da971fe4.mp3" length="75638338" type="audio/mpeg"/>
      <itunes:author>Council on Black Health</itunes:author>
      <itunes:duration>3142</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>
        <![CDATA[<p>Women’s health is often reduced to symptoms and quick fixes. But for many Black women, the reality is far more complex.</p><p>In this episode of <em>Reimagining Black Health</em>, Dr. Melicia Whitt-Glover explores what it really means to care for our bodies in a system that often overlooks, dismisses, or misunderstands our experiences. From heavy periods and fibroids to major decisions like hysterectomy, the conversation goes beyond treatment and gets to the root of what’s shaping our health.</p><p><br>Dr. Wynne Brown, OB/GYN and integrative medicine physician, and ShLanda Burton, certified doula trainer and birth equity advocate, unpack the deeper issues — from medical mistrust and misinformation to cultural pressures and environmental exposures — and how they impact Black women across the lifespan.</p><p>Together, they discuss:</p><ul><li>Why women’s health is often misunderstood in 2025</li><li>The myths and “quick fixes” that keep us stuck</li><li>How stress, nutrition, and environment shape reproductive health</li><li>The role of doulas and community in improving outcomes</li><li>What it means to build a trusted care circle</li><li>Simple, practical ways to start listening to your body again</li></ul><p>This episode is a reminder that women’s health is not just clinical — it’s personal, cultural, and deeply connected to how we live every day. And reclaiming it starts with paying attention to what our bodies have been telling us all along.</p><p><strong><br>EPISODE CHAPTERS — Women’s Health<br></strong><br></p><p>00:00 — Opening + Why Women’s Health Is More Complex Than We Think<br> 00:52 — Meet Dr. Wynne Brown &amp; ShLanda Burton<br> 01:50 — What Doulas Do and Why They Matter<br> 04:30 — The Village We’ve Lost in Women’s Health<br> 05:45 — What We’re Getting Wrong About Women’s Health<br> 10:45 — Stress, Rest, and the Impact of Misinformation<br> 14:15 — The Problem with Quick Fixes and Health Trends<br> 18:45 — Food, Nutrition, and Making Better Choices<br> 23:00 — Heavy Periods, Fibroids, and Root Causes<br> 27:00 — Real Solutions: Food, Sleep, and Stress<br> 32:30 — Doulas, Advocacy, and Barriers to Care<br> 38:00 — Building a Trusted Circle of Care<br> 42:30 — Finding the Right Providers and Trusting Your Instincts<br> 46:00 — One Thing You Can Do This Week + Closing</p><p><strong>💡 Connect and Learn More</strong></p><p>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.</p><p><br></p><p>Follow and subscribe to <em>Reimagining Black Health</em> for more conversations that challenge us to think differently about what it truly means to thrive.</p><p><br></p><p>Join us in achieving equity for generations. Donate to help the Council on Black Health drive lasting impact!</p><p>https://councilbh.app.neoncrm.com/forms/donate</p>]]>
      </itunes:summary>
      <itunes:keywords>Black health, health equity, wellness, mental health, optimal health, public health, Council on Black Health, Dr. Melicia Whitt-Glover</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>No</itunes:explicit>
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      <title>Reimagining Intellectual Wellbeing in Black Communities</title>
      <itunes:episode>8</itunes:episode>
      <podcast:episode>8</podcast:episode>
      <itunes:title>Reimagining Intellectual Wellbeing in Black Communities</itunes:title>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
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      <link>https://share.transistor.fm/s/367f0b95</link>
      <description>
        <![CDATA[<p>What does intellectual wellbeing really mean... especially in Black communities?</p><p>In this episode of <em>Reimagining Black Health</em>, Dr. Melicia Whitt-Glover explores the dimension of intellectual wellbeing — not just as academic achievement, but as imagination, critical thinking, cultural knowledge, spiritual insight, and the confidence to claim our brilliance.</p><p><br>She’s joined by Dr. Dawn N. Hicks Tafari, scholar, activist, and professor of education at Winston-Salem State University, and Tonya Ankhi Ma’at Poole, author, spiritual guide, and Executive Director of Indigo’s Cultural Art Centers.</p><p><br>Together, they examine:</p><p>● Why Black intellectual excellence is a legacy — not an exception<br>● How intellectual well-being extends far beyond degrees and institutions<br>● The isolation of being “the only one in the room”<br>● How community and mentorship shape confidence and creativity<br>● The role of spirituality, intuition, and ancestral knowledge in scholarship<br>● Practical ways to reconnect with your own intellectual self</p><p><br>This conversation challenges dominant narratives that marginalize Black contributions and invites listeners to reclaim their intellectual inheritance — boldly and unapologetically.</p><p>Intellectual well-being isn’t about proving anything. It’s about remembering who we’ve always been.</p><p><br></p><p><strong>EPISODE CHAPTERS<br></strong><br></p><p><br>00:00 — Black Brilliance Is Legacy, Not Anomaly<br> 00:30 — What Is Intellectual Wellbeing?<br> 01:10 — Meet Dr. Dawn Tafari &amp; Tonya Ankhi Ma’at Poole<br> 02:30 — Intellectualism Beyond Degrees<br> 05:00 — The Isolation of Being “The Only One”<br> 08:00 — Contemporary Black Scholars Shaping the Future<br> 12:00 — The Unique Lens of Black Women in Intellectual Spaces<br> 16:30 — Community, Mentorship &amp; Intellectual Confidence<br> 20:00 — Confronting Imposter Syndrome<br> 24:00 — Integrating Spirituality &amp; Scholarship<br> 28:00 — Ancestral Wisdom and Academic Rigor<br> 32:00 — Decolonizing the Mind<br> 36:00 — Books, Resources &amp; Where to Begin<br> 40:00 — Building Intergenerational Learning Communities<br> 44:00 — Reimagining the Future of Black Intellectual Traditions<br> 47:00 — One Step You Can Take This Week<br> 49:00 — Closing Reflections</p><p><br></p><p>💡 Connect and Learn More</p><p> 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.</p><p><br></p><p>Follow and subscribe to <em>Reimagining Black Health</em> for more conversations that challenge us to think differently about what it truly means to thrive.</p><p><br></p><p>Join us in achieving equity for generations. Donate to help the Council on Black Health drive lasting impact!</p><p>https://councilbh.app.neoncrm.com/forms/donate</p>]]>
      </description>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[<p>What does intellectual wellbeing really mean... especially in Black communities?</p><p>In this episode of <em>Reimagining Black Health</em>, Dr. Melicia Whitt-Glover explores the dimension of intellectual wellbeing — not just as academic achievement, but as imagination, critical thinking, cultural knowledge, spiritual insight, and the confidence to claim our brilliance.</p><p><br>She’s joined by Dr. Dawn N. Hicks Tafari, scholar, activist, and professor of education at Winston-Salem State University, and Tonya Ankhi Ma’at Poole, author, spiritual guide, and Executive Director of Indigo’s Cultural Art Centers.</p><p><br>Together, they examine:</p><p>● Why Black intellectual excellence is a legacy — not an exception<br>● How intellectual well-being extends far beyond degrees and institutions<br>● The isolation of being “the only one in the room”<br>● How community and mentorship shape confidence and creativity<br>● The role of spirituality, intuition, and ancestral knowledge in scholarship<br>● Practical ways to reconnect with your own intellectual self</p><p><br>This conversation challenges dominant narratives that marginalize Black contributions and invites listeners to reclaim their intellectual inheritance — boldly and unapologetically.</p><p>Intellectual well-being isn’t about proving anything. It’s about remembering who we’ve always been.</p><p><br></p><p><strong>EPISODE CHAPTERS<br></strong><br></p><p><br>00:00 — Black Brilliance Is Legacy, Not Anomaly<br> 00:30 — What Is Intellectual Wellbeing?<br> 01:10 — Meet Dr. Dawn Tafari &amp; Tonya Ankhi Ma’at Poole<br> 02:30 — Intellectualism Beyond Degrees<br> 05:00 — The Isolation of Being “The Only One”<br> 08:00 — Contemporary Black Scholars Shaping the Future<br> 12:00 — The Unique Lens of Black Women in Intellectual Spaces<br> 16:30 — Community, Mentorship &amp; Intellectual Confidence<br> 20:00 — Confronting Imposter Syndrome<br> 24:00 — Integrating Spirituality &amp; Scholarship<br> 28:00 — Ancestral Wisdom and Academic Rigor<br> 32:00 — Decolonizing the Mind<br> 36:00 — Books, Resources &amp; Where to Begin<br> 40:00 — Building Intergenerational Learning Communities<br> 44:00 — Reimagining the Future of Black Intellectual Traditions<br> 47:00 — One Step You Can Take This Week<br> 49:00 — Closing Reflections</p><p><br></p><p>💡 Connect and Learn More</p><p> 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.</p><p><br></p><p>Follow and subscribe to <em>Reimagining Black Health</em> for more conversations that challenge us to think differently about what it truly means to thrive.</p><p><br></p><p>Join us in achieving equity for generations. Donate to help the Council on Black Health drive lasting impact!</p><p>https://councilbh.app.neoncrm.com/forms/donate</p>]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <pubDate>Thu, 05 Mar 2026 03:00:00 -0500</pubDate>
      <author>Council on Black Health</author>
      <enclosure url="https://media.transistor.fm/367f0b95/4619af0a.mp3" length="68349501" type="audio/mpeg"/>
      <itunes:author>Council on Black Health</itunes:author>
      <itunes:duration>2843</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>
        <![CDATA[<p>What does intellectual wellbeing really mean... especially in Black communities?</p><p>In this episode of <em>Reimagining Black Health</em>, Dr. Melicia Whitt-Glover explores the dimension of intellectual wellbeing — not just as academic achievement, but as imagination, critical thinking, cultural knowledge, spiritual insight, and the confidence to claim our brilliance.</p><p><br>She’s joined by Dr. Dawn N. Hicks Tafari, scholar, activist, and professor of education at Winston-Salem State University, and Tonya Ankhi Ma’at Poole, author, spiritual guide, and Executive Director of Indigo’s Cultural Art Centers.</p><p><br>Together, they examine:</p><p>● Why Black intellectual excellence is a legacy — not an exception<br>● How intellectual well-being extends far beyond degrees and institutions<br>● The isolation of being “the only one in the room”<br>● How community and mentorship shape confidence and creativity<br>● The role of spirituality, intuition, and ancestral knowledge in scholarship<br>● Practical ways to reconnect with your own intellectual self</p><p><br>This conversation challenges dominant narratives that marginalize Black contributions and invites listeners to reclaim their intellectual inheritance — boldly and unapologetically.</p><p>Intellectual well-being isn’t about proving anything. It’s about remembering who we’ve always been.</p><p><br></p><p><strong>EPISODE CHAPTERS<br></strong><br></p><p><br>00:00 — Black Brilliance Is Legacy, Not Anomaly<br> 00:30 — What Is Intellectual Wellbeing?<br> 01:10 — Meet Dr. Dawn Tafari &amp; Tonya Ankhi Ma’at Poole<br> 02:30 — Intellectualism Beyond Degrees<br> 05:00 — The Isolation of Being “The Only One”<br> 08:00 — Contemporary Black Scholars Shaping the Future<br> 12:00 — The Unique Lens of Black Women in Intellectual Spaces<br> 16:30 — Community, Mentorship &amp; Intellectual Confidence<br> 20:00 — Confronting Imposter Syndrome<br> 24:00 — Integrating Spirituality &amp; Scholarship<br> 28:00 — Ancestral Wisdom and Academic Rigor<br> 32:00 — Decolonizing the Mind<br> 36:00 — Books, Resources &amp; Where to Begin<br> 40:00 — Building Intergenerational Learning Communities<br> 44:00 — Reimagining the Future of Black Intellectual Traditions<br> 47:00 — One Step You Can Take This Week<br> 49:00 — Closing Reflections</p><p><br></p><p>💡 Connect and Learn More</p><p> 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.</p><p><br></p><p>Follow and subscribe to <em>Reimagining Black Health</em> for more conversations that challenge us to think differently about what it truly means to thrive.</p><p><br></p><p>Join us in achieving equity for generations. Donate to help the Council on Black Health drive lasting impact!</p><p>https://councilbh.app.neoncrm.com/forms/donate</p>]]>
      </itunes:summary>
      <itunes:keywords>Black health, health equity, wellness, mental health, optimal health, public health, Council on Black Health, Dr. Melicia Whitt-Glover</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>No</itunes:explicit>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>The Air, Water, and Land We Live On: Reimagining Environmental Health in Black Communities</title>
      <itunes:episode>7</itunes:episode>
      <podcast:episode>7</podcast:episode>
      <itunes:title>The Air, Water, and Land We Live On: Reimagining Environmental Health in Black Communities</itunes:title>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">3596eb1d-3cf2-4fbe-b9e4-22baee3e7752</guid>
      <link>https://share.transistor.fm/s/9779fca1</link>
      <description>
        <![CDATA[<p><br>What if the air you breathe, the water you drink, and even the pots in your kitchen are shaping your health more than you realize?</p><p><br>In this episode of <em>Reimagining Black Health</em>, host Dr. Melicia Whitt-Glover sits down with Dr. Kristin Motley, Health Commissioner for the City of Chester, PA, and Dr. Kendra B. McDow, Medical Officer for the School District of Philadelphia, to unpack how environmental health drives chronic disease in Black communities — and why we’re “late to the game” in addressing it.</p><p><br>From lead paint and aging housing stock to pediatric asthma, trash incinerators, highway pollution, and even PFAS in cookware, this conversation makes one thing clear: environmental justice is not optional. It’s foundational to thriving.</p><p><br>Drawing from frontline experience in Chester and Philadelphia, Dr. Motley and Dr. McDow connect the dots between policy, poverty, race, and health outcomes — and explain why solutions must move beyond individual behavior to systemic change.</p><p><br>Together, they explore:</p><ul><li>Why environmental health is a root cause of asthma, heart disease, kidney disease, and infant mortality</li><li>How policy decisions at the local and national levels shape community health</li><li>Why wealthier communities aren’t immune to environmental harm</li><li>What “environmental justice” really means — and what it looks like when it works</li><li>The link between school environments and student health outcomes</li><li>Practical steps you can take today to reduce toxin exposure at home</li><li>How community organizing and civic engagement create real change<p><br></p></li></ul><p>You’ll also walk away with tangible actions you can take this week — from avoiding heating food in plastic to getting involved in local policy decisions that affect your air and water.</p><p><br>The bottom line? We all breathe the same air. Environmental justice isn’t just about one neighborhood — it’s about all of us.</p><p><strong><br>EPISODE CHAPTERS — Environmental Health &amp; Justice<br></strong><br></p><p><br>00:00 — “We’re Late to the Game”<br> 01:00 — Meet Dr. Kristin Motley &amp; Dr. Kendra McDow<br> 02:00 — What Is Environmental Health?<br> 06:00 — Data Centers, Pollution &amp; Modern Environmental Threats<br> 08:00 — PFAS, Cookware &amp; Hidden Toxins at Home<br> 12:00 — What Does “Community” Really Mean?<br> 14:00 — Chester’s Environmental Burden<br> 17:00 — Wildfires, Air Quality &amp; Our Interconnected World<br> 21:00 — What Is Environmental Justice?<br> 24:00 — Asthma &amp; School Health in Philadelphia<br> 28:00 — Chronic Disease as an Environmental Issue<br> 31:00 — Trash, Policy &amp; Who Bears the Cost<br> 35:00 — Composting, Recycling &amp; Real Solutions<br> 40:00 — What You Can Do to Support Change<br> 48:00 — One Immediate Step to Reduce Toxin Exposure<br> 50:00 — Closing Reflections</p><p><br>💡 <strong>Connect and Learn More<br></strong> 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.</p><p><br>Follow and subscribe to <em>Reimagining Black Health</em> for more conversations that challenge us to think differently about what it truly means to thrive.</p><p><br></p><p>Join us in achieving equity for generations. Donate to help the Council on Black Health drive lasting impact!</p><p>https://councilbh.app.neoncrm.com/forms/donate</p><p><br></p>]]>
      </description>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[<p><br>What if the air you breathe, the water you drink, and even the pots in your kitchen are shaping your health more than you realize?</p><p><br>In this episode of <em>Reimagining Black Health</em>, host Dr. Melicia Whitt-Glover sits down with Dr. Kristin Motley, Health Commissioner for the City of Chester, PA, and Dr. Kendra B. McDow, Medical Officer for the School District of Philadelphia, to unpack how environmental health drives chronic disease in Black communities — and why we’re “late to the game” in addressing it.</p><p><br>From lead paint and aging housing stock to pediatric asthma, trash incinerators, highway pollution, and even PFAS in cookware, this conversation makes one thing clear: environmental justice is not optional. It’s foundational to thriving.</p><p><br>Drawing from frontline experience in Chester and Philadelphia, Dr. Motley and Dr. McDow connect the dots between policy, poverty, race, and health outcomes — and explain why solutions must move beyond individual behavior to systemic change.</p><p><br>Together, they explore:</p><ul><li>Why environmental health is a root cause of asthma, heart disease, kidney disease, and infant mortality</li><li>How policy decisions at the local and national levels shape community health</li><li>Why wealthier communities aren’t immune to environmental harm</li><li>What “environmental justice” really means — and what it looks like when it works</li><li>The link between school environments and student health outcomes</li><li>Practical steps you can take today to reduce toxin exposure at home</li><li>How community organizing and civic engagement create real change<p><br></p></li></ul><p>You’ll also walk away with tangible actions you can take this week — from avoiding heating food in plastic to getting involved in local policy decisions that affect your air and water.</p><p><br>The bottom line? We all breathe the same air. Environmental justice isn’t just about one neighborhood — it’s about all of us.</p><p><strong><br>EPISODE CHAPTERS — Environmental Health &amp; Justice<br></strong><br></p><p><br>00:00 — “We’re Late to the Game”<br> 01:00 — Meet Dr. Kristin Motley &amp; Dr. Kendra McDow<br> 02:00 — What Is Environmental Health?<br> 06:00 — Data Centers, Pollution &amp; Modern Environmental Threats<br> 08:00 — PFAS, Cookware &amp; Hidden Toxins at Home<br> 12:00 — What Does “Community” Really Mean?<br> 14:00 — Chester’s Environmental Burden<br> 17:00 — Wildfires, Air Quality &amp; Our Interconnected World<br> 21:00 — What Is Environmental Justice?<br> 24:00 — Asthma &amp; School Health in Philadelphia<br> 28:00 — Chronic Disease as an Environmental Issue<br> 31:00 — Trash, Policy &amp; Who Bears the Cost<br> 35:00 — Composting, Recycling &amp; Real Solutions<br> 40:00 — What You Can Do to Support Change<br> 48:00 — One Immediate Step to Reduce Toxin Exposure<br> 50:00 — Closing Reflections</p><p><br>💡 <strong>Connect and Learn More<br></strong> 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.</p><p><br>Follow and subscribe to <em>Reimagining Black Health</em> for more conversations that challenge us to think differently about what it truly means to thrive.</p><p><br></p><p>Join us in achieving equity for generations. Donate to help the Council on Black Health drive lasting impact!</p><p>https://councilbh.app.neoncrm.com/forms/donate</p><p><br></p>]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <pubDate>Thu, 19 Feb 2026 03:00:00 -0500</pubDate>
      <author>Council on Black Health</author>
      <enclosure url="https://media.transistor.fm/9779fca1/a21fde7b.mp3" length="48728608" type="audio/mpeg"/>
      <itunes:author>Council on Black Health</itunes:author>
      <itunes:duration>3041</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>
        <![CDATA[<p><br>What if the air you breathe, the water you drink, and even the pots in your kitchen are shaping your health more than you realize?</p><p><br>In this episode of <em>Reimagining Black Health</em>, host Dr. Melicia Whitt-Glover sits down with Dr. Kristin Motley, Health Commissioner for the City of Chester, PA, and Dr. Kendra B. McDow, Medical Officer for the School District of Philadelphia, to unpack how environmental health drives chronic disease in Black communities — and why we’re “late to the game” in addressing it.</p><p><br>From lead paint and aging housing stock to pediatric asthma, trash incinerators, highway pollution, and even PFAS in cookware, this conversation makes one thing clear: environmental justice is not optional. It’s foundational to thriving.</p><p><br>Drawing from frontline experience in Chester and Philadelphia, Dr. Motley and Dr. McDow connect the dots between policy, poverty, race, and health outcomes — and explain why solutions must move beyond individual behavior to systemic change.</p><p><br>Together, they explore:</p><ul><li>Why environmental health is a root cause of asthma, heart disease, kidney disease, and infant mortality</li><li>How policy decisions at the local and national levels shape community health</li><li>Why wealthier communities aren’t immune to environmental harm</li><li>What “environmental justice” really means — and what it looks like when it works</li><li>The link between school environments and student health outcomes</li><li>Practical steps you can take today to reduce toxin exposure at home</li><li>How community organizing and civic engagement create real change<p><br></p></li></ul><p>You’ll also walk away with tangible actions you can take this week — from avoiding heating food in plastic to getting involved in local policy decisions that affect your air and water.</p><p><br>The bottom line? We all breathe the same air. Environmental justice isn’t just about one neighborhood — it’s about all of us.</p><p><strong><br>EPISODE CHAPTERS — Environmental Health &amp; Justice<br></strong><br></p><p><br>00:00 — “We’re Late to the Game”<br> 01:00 — Meet Dr. Kristin Motley &amp; Dr. Kendra McDow<br> 02:00 — What Is Environmental Health?<br> 06:00 — Data Centers, Pollution &amp; Modern Environmental Threats<br> 08:00 — PFAS, Cookware &amp; Hidden Toxins at Home<br> 12:00 — What Does “Community” Really Mean?<br> 14:00 — Chester’s Environmental Burden<br> 17:00 — Wildfires, Air Quality &amp; Our Interconnected World<br> 21:00 — What Is Environmental Justice?<br> 24:00 — Asthma &amp; School Health in Philadelphia<br> 28:00 — Chronic Disease as an Environmental Issue<br> 31:00 — Trash, Policy &amp; Who Bears the Cost<br> 35:00 — Composting, Recycling &amp; Real Solutions<br> 40:00 — What You Can Do to Support Change<br> 48:00 — One Immediate Step to Reduce Toxin Exposure<br> 50:00 — Closing Reflections</p><p><br>💡 <strong>Connect and Learn More<br></strong> 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.</p><p><br>Follow and subscribe to <em>Reimagining Black Health</em> for more conversations that challenge us to think differently about what it truly means to thrive.</p><p><br></p><p>Join us in achieving equity for generations. Donate to help the Council on Black Health drive lasting impact!</p><p>https://councilbh.app.neoncrm.com/forms/donate</p><p><br></p>]]>
      </itunes:summary>
      <itunes:keywords>Black health, health equity, wellness, mental health, optimal health, public health, Council on Black Health, Dr. Melicia Whitt-Glover</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>No</itunes:explicit>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>The Power of Spiritual Wellbeing in Black Communities</title>
      <itunes:episode>6</itunes:episode>
      <podcast:episode>6</podcast:episode>
      <itunes:title>The Power of Spiritual Wellbeing in Black Communities</itunes:title>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">c14fae38-2fe6-4d7e-9f4e-ec69b123c479</guid>
      <link>https://share.transistor.fm/s/b952c278</link>
      <description>
        <![CDATA[<p>What does spiritual wellbeing really mean—beyond church walls, social media platitudes, or “positive vibes only”?</p><p>In this episode of <em>Reimagining Black Health</em>, Dr. Melicia Whitt-Glover explores spiritual wellbeing as a lived, relational practice rooted in meaning, purpose, connection, and care. Joined by <strong>Dorothy McGuire</strong>, pastor and retired registered nurse, and <strong>Jacqueline Mattis</strong>, researcher and psychologist, the conversation moves past abstract definitions and into how spirituality actually shows up in daily life—especially in Black communities.</p><p>Together, they unpack how faith, forgiveness, joy, community, and dignity have historically sustained Black people through collective trauma—and why those same practices still matter now. They also examine the tension between spiritual depth and modern culture, from isolation and burnout to performative vulnerability and reality-TV conflict.</p><p>In this episode, you’ll hear:</p><ul><li>Why spiritual wellbeing is practiced <em>in relationship</em>, not isolation</li><li>How faith and spirituality have shaped Black resilience and survival</li><li>The difference between feeling good and truly being well</li><li>Why forgiveness—including forgiving yourself—is essential to healing</li><li>How joy, laughter, and human connection are indicators of spiritual safety</li><li>Simple, practical ways to begin strengthening spiritual wellbeing this week<p></p></li></ul><p>This episode is a reminder that optimal Black health isn’t just physical or emotional—it’s about feeling whole, grounded, and connected to something larger than yourself and to each other.</p><p>💡 Connect and Learn More</p><p> 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.</p><p><br></p><p>Follow us for future episodes, resources, and conversations that center healing, joy, and thriving.</p><p><br></p><p>Join us in achieving equity for generations. Donate to help the Council on Black Health drive lasting impact!</p><p>https://councilbh.app.neoncrm.com/forms/donate</p><p><br></p>]]>
      </description>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[<p>What does spiritual wellbeing really mean—beyond church walls, social media platitudes, or “positive vibes only”?</p><p>In this episode of <em>Reimagining Black Health</em>, Dr. Melicia Whitt-Glover explores spiritual wellbeing as a lived, relational practice rooted in meaning, purpose, connection, and care. Joined by <strong>Dorothy McGuire</strong>, pastor and retired registered nurse, and <strong>Jacqueline Mattis</strong>, researcher and psychologist, the conversation moves past abstract definitions and into how spirituality actually shows up in daily life—especially in Black communities.</p><p>Together, they unpack how faith, forgiveness, joy, community, and dignity have historically sustained Black people through collective trauma—and why those same practices still matter now. They also examine the tension between spiritual depth and modern culture, from isolation and burnout to performative vulnerability and reality-TV conflict.</p><p>In this episode, you’ll hear:</p><ul><li>Why spiritual wellbeing is practiced <em>in relationship</em>, not isolation</li><li>How faith and spirituality have shaped Black resilience and survival</li><li>The difference between feeling good and truly being well</li><li>Why forgiveness—including forgiving yourself—is essential to healing</li><li>How joy, laughter, and human connection are indicators of spiritual safety</li><li>Simple, practical ways to begin strengthening spiritual wellbeing this week<p></p></li></ul><p>This episode is a reminder that optimal Black health isn’t just physical or emotional—it’s about feeling whole, grounded, and connected to something larger than yourself and to each other.</p><p>💡 Connect and Learn More</p><p> 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.</p><p><br></p><p>Follow us for future episodes, resources, and conversations that center healing, joy, and thriving.</p><p><br></p><p>Join us in achieving equity for generations. Donate to help the Council on Black Health drive lasting impact!</p><p>https://councilbh.app.neoncrm.com/forms/donate</p><p><br></p>]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <pubDate>Thu, 05 Feb 2026 15:00:00 -0500</pubDate>
      <author>Council on Black Health</author>
      <enclosure url="https://media.transistor.fm/b952c278/c0f246ed.mp3" length="73236891" type="audio/mpeg"/>
      <itunes:author>Council on Black Health</itunes:author>
      <itunes:duration>3047</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>
        <![CDATA[<p>What does spiritual wellbeing really mean—beyond church walls, social media platitudes, or “positive vibes only”?</p><p>In this episode of <em>Reimagining Black Health</em>, Dr. Melicia Whitt-Glover explores spiritual wellbeing as a lived, relational practice rooted in meaning, purpose, connection, and care. Joined by <strong>Dorothy McGuire</strong>, pastor and retired registered nurse, and <strong>Jacqueline Mattis</strong>, researcher and psychologist, the conversation moves past abstract definitions and into how spirituality actually shows up in daily life—especially in Black communities.</p><p>Together, they unpack how faith, forgiveness, joy, community, and dignity have historically sustained Black people through collective trauma—and why those same practices still matter now. They also examine the tension between spiritual depth and modern culture, from isolation and burnout to performative vulnerability and reality-TV conflict.</p><p>In this episode, you’ll hear:</p><ul><li>Why spiritual wellbeing is practiced <em>in relationship</em>, not isolation</li><li>How faith and spirituality have shaped Black resilience and survival</li><li>The difference between feeling good and truly being well</li><li>Why forgiveness—including forgiving yourself—is essential to healing</li><li>How joy, laughter, and human connection are indicators of spiritual safety</li><li>Simple, practical ways to begin strengthening spiritual wellbeing this week<p></p></li></ul><p>This episode is a reminder that optimal Black health isn’t just physical or emotional—it’s about feeling whole, grounded, and connected to something larger than yourself and to each other.</p><p>💡 Connect and Learn More</p><p> 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.</p><p><br></p><p>Follow us for future episodes, resources, and conversations that center healing, joy, and thriving.</p><p><br></p><p>Join us in achieving equity for generations. Donate to help the Council on Black Health drive lasting impact!</p><p>https://councilbh.app.neoncrm.com/forms/donate</p><p><br></p>]]>
      </itunes:summary>
      <itunes:keywords>Black health, health equity, wellness, mental health, optimal health, public health, Council on Black Health, Dr. Melicia Whitt-Glover</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>No</itunes:explicit>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Reimagining Financial Wellbeing in Black Communities</title>
      <itunes:episode>5</itunes:episode>
      <podcast:episode>5</podcast:episode>
      <itunes:title>Reimagining Financial Wellbeing in Black Communities</itunes:title>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">753f337e-581c-4375-a2ca-9efc6b98aa01</guid>
      <link>https://share.transistor.fm/s/4f8e52e5</link>
      <description>
        <![CDATA[<p>Financial wellbeing isn’t just about how much money you make — it’s about stability, security, and freedom of choice. In this episode of <em>Reimagining Black Health</em>, Dr. Melicia Whitt-Glover explores the dimension of <strong>financial wellbeing</strong>, examining what it truly means for Black individuals and families to move from surviving to thriving.</p><p>Guests <strong>Stephanie Yates</strong>, Executive Director of the UAB Regions Institute for Financial Education, and <strong>Darrius Peace</strong>, 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.</p><p>Together, they examine:</p><p>● What it means to financially thrive beyond income alone<br> ● How historic and systemic exclusion created today’s racial wealth gap<br> ● Why Black Wall Street mattered — and what it teaches us today<br> ● The role of land ownership, estate planning, and generational transfers<br> ● How fear, lack of information, and missing paperwork lead to asset loss<br> ● Why community, collective action, and shared knowledge are essential to financial liberation<br> ● Practical steps individuals can take this week to strengthen their financial wellbeing</p><p><br>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.<br></p><p><b><strong>EPISODE CHAPTERS — Financial Wellbeing</strong></b></p><p>00:00 — Financial Wellbeing Defined: Surviving vs. Thriving<br> 01:00 — Meet Stephanie Yates &amp; Darrius Peace<br> 02:00 — Stability, Flow, and Financial Confidence<br> 05:00 — The Racial Wealth Gap Explained<br> 09:00 — Redlining, Exclusion, and Predatory Lending<br> 12:30 — Black Wall Street and Lessons from the Past<br> 17:00 — Why Fear and Policy Block Rebuilding<br> 19:00 — Keeping Wealth in the Community<br> 22:00 — Land Ownership and Generational Transfers<br> 26:00 — Estate Planning and Lost Assets<br> 30:00 — Community, Trust, and Financial Conversations<br> 35:00 — Education as Empowerment<br> 41:00 — One Action You Can Take This Week<br> 48:00 — Closing</p><p><br></p><p>💡 Connect and Learn More</p><p> 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.</p><p>Follow us for future episodes, resources, and conversations that center healing, joy, and thriving.</p><p><br></p><p>Join us in achieving equity for generations. Donate to help the Council on Black Health drive lasting impact!</p><p>https://councilbh.app.neoncrm.com/forms/donate</p><p><br></p><p><br></p>]]>
      </description>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[<p>Financial wellbeing isn’t just about how much money you make — it’s about stability, security, and freedom of choice. In this episode of <em>Reimagining Black Health</em>, Dr. Melicia Whitt-Glover explores the dimension of <strong>financial wellbeing</strong>, examining what it truly means for Black individuals and families to move from surviving to thriving.</p><p>Guests <strong>Stephanie Yates</strong>, Executive Director of the UAB Regions Institute for Financial Education, and <strong>Darrius Peace</strong>, 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.</p><p>Together, they examine:</p><p>● What it means to financially thrive beyond income alone<br> ● How historic and systemic exclusion created today’s racial wealth gap<br> ● Why Black Wall Street mattered — and what it teaches us today<br> ● The role of land ownership, estate planning, and generational transfers<br> ● How fear, lack of information, and missing paperwork lead to asset loss<br> ● Why community, collective action, and shared knowledge are essential to financial liberation<br> ● Practical steps individuals can take this week to strengthen their financial wellbeing</p><p><br>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.<br></p><p><b><strong>EPISODE CHAPTERS — Financial Wellbeing</strong></b></p><p>00:00 — Financial Wellbeing Defined: Surviving vs. Thriving<br> 01:00 — Meet Stephanie Yates &amp; Darrius Peace<br> 02:00 — Stability, Flow, and Financial Confidence<br> 05:00 — The Racial Wealth Gap Explained<br> 09:00 — Redlining, Exclusion, and Predatory Lending<br> 12:30 — Black Wall Street and Lessons from the Past<br> 17:00 — Why Fear and Policy Block Rebuilding<br> 19:00 — Keeping Wealth in the Community<br> 22:00 — Land Ownership and Generational Transfers<br> 26:00 — Estate Planning and Lost Assets<br> 30:00 — Community, Trust, and Financial Conversations<br> 35:00 — Education as Empowerment<br> 41:00 — One Action You Can Take This Week<br> 48:00 — Closing</p><p><br></p><p>💡 Connect and Learn More</p><p> 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.</p><p>Follow us for future episodes, resources, and conversations that center healing, joy, and thriving.</p><p><br></p><p>Join us in achieving equity for generations. Donate to help the Council on Black Health drive lasting impact!</p><p>https://councilbh.app.neoncrm.com/forms/donate</p><p><br></p><p><br></p>]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <pubDate>Thu, 22 Jan 2026 03:00:00 -0500</pubDate>
      <author>Council on Black Health</author>
      <enclosure url="https://media.transistor.fm/4f8e52e5/9a69440a.mp3" length="70181741" type="audio/mpeg"/>
      <itunes:author>Council on Black Health</itunes:author>
      <itunes:duration>2920</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>
        <![CDATA[<p>Financial wellbeing isn’t just about how much money you make — it’s about stability, security, and freedom of choice. In this episode of <em>Reimagining Black Health</em>, Dr. Melicia Whitt-Glover explores the dimension of <strong>financial wellbeing</strong>, examining what it truly means for Black individuals and families to move from surviving to thriving.</p><p>Guests <strong>Stephanie Yates</strong>, Executive Director of the UAB Regions Institute for Financial Education, and <strong>Darrius Peace</strong>, 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.</p><p>Together, they examine:</p><p>● What it means to financially thrive beyond income alone<br> ● How historic and systemic exclusion created today’s racial wealth gap<br> ● Why Black Wall Street mattered — and what it teaches us today<br> ● The role of land ownership, estate planning, and generational transfers<br> ● How fear, lack of information, and missing paperwork lead to asset loss<br> ● Why community, collective action, and shared knowledge are essential to financial liberation<br> ● Practical steps individuals can take this week to strengthen their financial wellbeing</p><p><br>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.<br></p><p><b><strong>EPISODE CHAPTERS — Financial Wellbeing</strong></b></p><p>00:00 — Financial Wellbeing Defined: Surviving vs. Thriving<br> 01:00 — Meet Stephanie Yates &amp; Darrius Peace<br> 02:00 — Stability, Flow, and Financial Confidence<br> 05:00 — The Racial Wealth Gap Explained<br> 09:00 — Redlining, Exclusion, and Predatory Lending<br> 12:30 — Black Wall Street and Lessons from the Past<br> 17:00 — Why Fear and Policy Block Rebuilding<br> 19:00 — Keeping Wealth in the Community<br> 22:00 — Land Ownership and Generational Transfers<br> 26:00 — Estate Planning and Lost Assets<br> 30:00 — Community, Trust, and Financial Conversations<br> 35:00 — Education as Empowerment<br> 41:00 — One Action You Can Take This Week<br> 48:00 — Closing</p><p><br></p><p>💡 Connect and Learn More</p><p> 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.</p><p>Follow us for future episodes, resources, and conversations that center healing, joy, and thriving.</p><p><br></p><p>Join us in achieving equity for generations. Donate to help the Council on Black Health drive lasting impact!</p><p>https://councilbh.app.neoncrm.com/forms/donate</p><p><br></p><p><br></p>]]>
      </itunes:summary>
      <itunes:keywords>Black health, health equity, wellness, mental health, optimal health, public health, Council on Black Health, Dr. Melicia Whitt-Glover</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>No</itunes:explicit>
      <podcast:transcript url="https://share.transistor.fm/s/4f8e52e5/transcript.srt" type="application/x-subrip" rel="captions"/>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Emotional Wellbeing and the Courage to Feel</title>
      <itunes:episode>4</itunes:episode>
      <podcast:episode>4</podcast:episode>
      <itunes:title>Emotional Wellbeing and the Courage to Feel</itunes:title>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">7035e3c8-856b-4150-9f00-b4920d7a8329</guid>
      <link>https://share.transistor.fm/s/ebaaa4dc</link>
      <description>
        <![CDATA[<p>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.</p><p>In this episode of <em>Reimagining Black Health</em>, 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.</p><p>Together, they have an honest, grounded conversation about rest, healing, and what it really takes to support emotional health in everyday life.</p><p>In this episode, you’ll hear about:</p><ul><li>What emotional wellbeing actually means beyond clinical definitions<p></p></li><li>The “soft life” conversation and why rest can be an act of resistance<p></p></li><li>Healing generational trauma and letting go of survival-based behaviors<p></p></li><li>Why traditional, Eurocentric therapy models often fall short for Black communities</li></ul><p><br></p><p><br>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.</p><p><strong>Episode Chapters — Emotional Wellbeing<br></strong> 00:00 — What Is Emotional Wellbeing?<br> 01:00 — Meet Jahkazia Richardson &amp; Malik Washington<br> 02:30 — The “Soft Life” and Choosing Rest<br> 04:45 — Generational Trauma and Survival Mode<br> 07:30 — Black Men and Mental Health Stigma<br> 10:00 — Therapy, Fit, and Finding the Right Support<br> 14:00 — Decolonized Therapy and Ancestral Healing<br> 18:30 — Emotions, Expression, and Cultural Expectations<br> 22:00 — Stress, Policing, and Everyday Trauma<br> 27:00 — Community, Culture, and Belonging<br> 31:00 — Coping Skills and Healthy Release<br> 35:00 — What Thriving Emotionally Really Looks Like<br> 38:00 — One Simple Step to Support Emotional Wellbeing<br> 41:00 — Closing Reflections</p><p><br>💡 <strong>Connect and Learn More<br></strong> Visit <strong>councilbh.org</strong> 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.</p><p><br>Follow us for future episodes, resources, and conversations that center healing, joy, and thriving.</p><p>Join us in achieving equity for generations. Donate to help the Council on Black Health drive lasting impact!<br>https://councilbh.app.neoncrm.com/forms/donate</p><p><br></p>]]>
      </description>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[<p>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.</p><p>In this episode of <em>Reimagining Black Health</em>, 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.</p><p>Together, they have an honest, grounded conversation about rest, healing, and what it really takes to support emotional health in everyday life.</p><p>In this episode, you’ll hear about:</p><ul><li>What emotional wellbeing actually means beyond clinical definitions<p></p></li><li>The “soft life” conversation and why rest can be an act of resistance<p></p></li><li>Healing generational trauma and letting go of survival-based behaviors<p></p></li><li>Why traditional, Eurocentric therapy models often fall short for Black communities</li></ul><p><br></p><p><br>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.</p><p><strong>Episode Chapters — Emotional Wellbeing<br></strong> 00:00 — What Is Emotional Wellbeing?<br> 01:00 — Meet Jahkazia Richardson &amp; Malik Washington<br> 02:30 — The “Soft Life” and Choosing Rest<br> 04:45 — Generational Trauma and Survival Mode<br> 07:30 — Black Men and Mental Health Stigma<br> 10:00 — Therapy, Fit, and Finding the Right Support<br> 14:00 — Decolonized Therapy and Ancestral Healing<br> 18:30 — Emotions, Expression, and Cultural Expectations<br> 22:00 — Stress, Policing, and Everyday Trauma<br> 27:00 — Community, Culture, and Belonging<br> 31:00 — Coping Skills and Healthy Release<br> 35:00 — What Thriving Emotionally Really Looks Like<br> 38:00 — One Simple Step to Support Emotional Wellbeing<br> 41:00 — Closing Reflections</p><p><br>💡 <strong>Connect and Learn More<br></strong> Visit <strong>councilbh.org</strong> 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.</p><p><br>Follow us for future episodes, resources, and conversations that center healing, joy, and thriving.</p><p>Join us in achieving equity for generations. Donate to help the Council on Black Health drive lasting impact!<br>https://councilbh.app.neoncrm.com/forms/donate</p><p><br></p>]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <pubDate>Thu, 08 Jan 2026 02:00:00 -0500</pubDate>
      <author>Council on Black Health</author>
      <enclosure url="https://media.transistor.fm/ebaaa4dc/34930ac9.mp3" length="70129771" type="audio/mpeg"/>
      <itunes:author>Council on Black Health</itunes:author>
      <itunes:duration>2916</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>
        <![CDATA[<p>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.</p><p>In this episode of <em>Reimagining Black Health</em>, 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.</p><p>Together, they have an honest, grounded conversation about rest, healing, and what it really takes to support emotional health in everyday life.</p><p>In this episode, you’ll hear about:</p><ul><li>What emotional wellbeing actually means beyond clinical definitions<p></p></li><li>The “soft life” conversation and why rest can be an act of resistance<p></p></li><li>Healing generational trauma and letting go of survival-based behaviors<p></p></li><li>Why traditional, Eurocentric therapy models often fall short for Black communities</li></ul><p><br></p><p><br>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.</p><p><strong>Episode Chapters — Emotional Wellbeing<br></strong> 00:00 — What Is Emotional Wellbeing?<br> 01:00 — Meet Jahkazia Richardson &amp; Malik Washington<br> 02:30 — The “Soft Life” and Choosing Rest<br> 04:45 — Generational Trauma and Survival Mode<br> 07:30 — Black Men and Mental Health Stigma<br> 10:00 — Therapy, Fit, and Finding the Right Support<br> 14:00 — Decolonized Therapy and Ancestral Healing<br> 18:30 — Emotions, Expression, and Cultural Expectations<br> 22:00 — Stress, Policing, and Everyday Trauma<br> 27:00 — Community, Culture, and Belonging<br> 31:00 — Coping Skills and Healthy Release<br> 35:00 — What Thriving Emotionally Really Looks Like<br> 38:00 — One Simple Step to Support Emotional Wellbeing<br> 41:00 — Closing Reflections</p><p><br>💡 <strong>Connect and Learn More<br></strong> Visit <strong>councilbh.org</strong> 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.</p><p><br>Follow us for future episodes, resources, and conversations that center healing, joy, and thriving.</p><p>Join us in achieving equity for generations. Donate to help the Council on Black Health drive lasting impact!<br>https://councilbh.app.neoncrm.com/forms/donate</p><p><br></p>]]>
      </itunes:summary>
      <itunes:keywords>Black health, health equity, wellness, mental health, optimal health, public health, Council on Black Health, Dr. Melicia Whitt-Glover</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>No</itunes:explicit>
      <podcast:transcript url="https://share.transistor.fm/s/ebaaa4dc/transcript.srt" type="application/x-subrip" rel="captions"/>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Reimagining Occupational Wellbeing: Rest &amp; Liberation</title>
      <itunes:episode>3</itunes:episode>
      <podcast:episode>3</podcast:episode>
      <itunes:title>Reimagining Occupational Wellbeing: Rest &amp; Liberation</itunes:title>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
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      <link>https://share.transistor.fm/s/f1e75441</link>
      <description>
        <![CDATA[<p><br>Grinding isn’t wellness — and rest isn’t laziness. In this episode of <em>Reimagining Black Health</em>, Dr. Melicia Whitt-Glover explores the dimension of <strong>occupational wellbeing</strong>, asking what it truly means for Black people to thrive in the spaces where we work, lead, create, and care for others.</p><p><br>Guests <strong>Kelsie Bonaparte</strong> and <strong>Dr. Monique Johnson</strong> 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.</p><p><br>Together, they examine:</p><p><br>● How grind culture disguises itself as “self-improvement” and “wellness”<br> ● Why the pandemic forced a reckoning with our relationship to labor<br> ● How rest, autonomy, and boundaries protect our mental and physical health<br> ● Why optimal health must include joy, community, and meaningful purpose<br> ● Practical ways to rethink your workday and redefine success on your own terms</p><p><br>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.</p><p><b><strong>EPISODE CHAPTERS — Occupational Wellbeing</strong></b></p><p><br>00:00 — What Does Occupational Wellbeing Really Mean?<br> 00:30 — The Rise of Hustle Culture<br> 01:15 — How “Wellness Challenges” Reinforce Overwork<br> 03:00 — Rest as Resistance<br> 05:00 — Is a Shift Happening Post-Pandemic?<br> 07:00 — Redefining Wellness Outside the Medical Model<br> 10:00 — Joy, Agency, and Autonomy at Work<br> 14:00 — Balancing Roles Without Burning Out<br> 18:00 — Boundaries, Intention, and Working Smarter<br> 23:00 — Giving Yourself Grace<br> 27:00 — One Action You Can Take This Week<br> 38:00 — Closing</p><p><b><strong>💡 Connect and Learn More</strong></b></p><p><br>Visit <strong>councilbh.org</strong> to learn more about the Council on Black Health’s mission to advance health equity and reshape the future of Black wellness.</p><p><br>Follow us for future episodes, resources, and tools to help reimagine what it means to be well.</p><p>Join us in achieving equity for generations. Donate to help the Council on Black Health drive lasting impact!<br>https://councilbh.app.neoncrm.com/forms/donate</p><p><br></p>]]>
      </description>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[<p><br>Grinding isn’t wellness — and rest isn’t laziness. In this episode of <em>Reimagining Black Health</em>, Dr. Melicia Whitt-Glover explores the dimension of <strong>occupational wellbeing</strong>, asking what it truly means for Black people to thrive in the spaces where we work, lead, create, and care for others.</p><p><br>Guests <strong>Kelsie Bonaparte</strong> and <strong>Dr. Monique Johnson</strong> 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.</p><p><br>Together, they examine:</p><p><br>● How grind culture disguises itself as “self-improvement” and “wellness”<br> ● Why the pandemic forced a reckoning with our relationship to labor<br> ● How rest, autonomy, and boundaries protect our mental and physical health<br> ● Why optimal health must include joy, community, and meaningful purpose<br> ● Practical ways to rethink your workday and redefine success on your own terms</p><p><br>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.</p><p><b><strong>EPISODE CHAPTERS — Occupational Wellbeing</strong></b></p><p><br>00:00 — What Does Occupational Wellbeing Really Mean?<br> 00:30 — The Rise of Hustle Culture<br> 01:15 — How “Wellness Challenges” Reinforce Overwork<br> 03:00 — Rest as Resistance<br> 05:00 — Is a Shift Happening Post-Pandemic?<br> 07:00 — Redefining Wellness Outside the Medical Model<br> 10:00 — Joy, Agency, and Autonomy at Work<br> 14:00 — Balancing Roles Without Burning Out<br> 18:00 — Boundaries, Intention, and Working Smarter<br> 23:00 — Giving Yourself Grace<br> 27:00 — One Action You Can Take This Week<br> 38:00 — Closing</p><p><b><strong>💡 Connect and Learn More</strong></b></p><p><br>Visit <strong>councilbh.org</strong> to learn more about the Council on Black Health’s mission to advance health equity and reshape the future of Black wellness.</p><p><br>Follow us for future episodes, resources, and tools to help reimagine what it means to be well.</p><p>Join us in achieving equity for generations. Donate to help the Council on Black Health drive lasting impact!<br>https://councilbh.app.neoncrm.com/forms/donate</p><p><br></p>]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <pubDate>Thu, 18 Dec 2025 03:00:00 -0500</pubDate>
      <author>Council on Black Health</author>
      <enclosure url="https://media.transistor.fm/f1e75441/3df2fb2e.mp3" length="61641643" type="audio/mpeg"/>
      <itunes:author>Council on Black Health</itunes:author>
      <itunes:duration>2563</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>
        <![CDATA[<p><br>Grinding isn’t wellness — and rest isn’t laziness. In this episode of <em>Reimagining Black Health</em>, Dr. Melicia Whitt-Glover explores the dimension of <strong>occupational wellbeing</strong>, asking what it truly means for Black people to thrive in the spaces where we work, lead, create, and care for others.</p><p><br>Guests <strong>Kelsie Bonaparte</strong> and <strong>Dr. Monique Johnson</strong> 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.</p><p><br>Together, they examine:</p><p><br>● How grind culture disguises itself as “self-improvement” and “wellness”<br> ● Why the pandemic forced a reckoning with our relationship to labor<br> ● How rest, autonomy, and boundaries protect our mental and physical health<br> ● Why optimal health must include joy, community, and meaningful purpose<br> ● Practical ways to rethink your workday and redefine success on your own terms</p><p><br>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.</p><p><b><strong>EPISODE CHAPTERS — Occupational Wellbeing</strong></b></p><p><br>00:00 — What Does Occupational Wellbeing Really Mean?<br> 00:30 — The Rise of Hustle Culture<br> 01:15 — How “Wellness Challenges” Reinforce Overwork<br> 03:00 — Rest as Resistance<br> 05:00 — Is a Shift Happening Post-Pandemic?<br> 07:00 — Redefining Wellness Outside the Medical Model<br> 10:00 — Joy, Agency, and Autonomy at Work<br> 14:00 — Balancing Roles Without Burning Out<br> 18:00 — Boundaries, Intention, and Working Smarter<br> 23:00 — Giving Yourself Grace<br> 27:00 — One Action You Can Take This Week<br> 38:00 — Closing</p><p><b><strong>💡 Connect and Learn More</strong></b></p><p><br>Visit <strong>councilbh.org</strong> to learn more about the Council on Black Health’s mission to advance health equity and reshape the future of Black wellness.</p><p><br>Follow us for future episodes, resources, and tools to help reimagine what it means to be well.</p><p>Join us in achieving equity for generations. Donate to help the Council on Black Health drive lasting impact!<br>https://councilbh.app.neoncrm.com/forms/donate</p><p><br></p>]]>
      </itunes:summary>
      <itunes:keywords>Black health, health equity, wellness, mental health, optimal health, public health, Council on Black Health, Dr. Melicia Whitt-Glover</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>No</itunes:explicit>
      <podcast:transcript url="https://share.transistor.fm/s/f1e75441/transcript.srt" type="application/x-subrip" rel="captions"/>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Rethinking Social Wellbeing in Black Communities</title>
      <itunes:episode>2</itunes:episode>
      <podcast:episode>2</podcast:episode>
      <itunes:title>Rethinking Social Wellbeing in Black Communities</itunes:title>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">c5d30440-77f6-4b30-8cc6-4dca74a03e57</guid>
      <link>https://share.transistor.fm/s/f322c4cd</link>
      <description>
        <![CDATA[<p>Loneliness isn’t just a feeling — it’s a public health crisis. In this episode of <em>Reimagining Black Health</em>, Dr. Melicia Whitt-Glover digs into the dimension of <strong>social wellbeing</strong>, exploring why real connection is as vital to our health as sleep, nutrition, and movement.</p><p><br>Guests <strong>Michele Paul</strong>, creator of <em>Let’s Get Social Raleigh</em> and founder of the Adult Recess movement, and <strong>Chelsey Reese</strong>, therapist and somatic practitioner, break down how community, joy, play, and vulnerability shape our emotional and physical health.</p><p><br>Together, they examine:</p><ul><li>Why loneliness raises the risks of heart disease, stroke, dementia, and early death<p></p></li><li>Why joy is a <em>birthright</em>, not something we have to earn<p></p></li><li>What “being seen” truly feels like — and why it's deeper than just being around people<p></p></li><li>How play and community events can spark radical healing<p></p></li><li>Practical, simple steps anyone can take this week to strengthen their own social wellbeing<p></p></li></ul><p>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.</p><p><br></p><p><br>EPISODE CHAPTERS — Social Wellbeing</p><p>00:00 — Joy as a Birthright</p><p>00:26 — What Is Social Wellbeing?</p><p>01:00 — Meet Michele Paul &amp; Chelsey Reese</p><p>01:20 — Loneliness as a Public Health Crisis</p><p>03:00 — Systemic Barriers to Connection</p><p>03:35 — Social Media’s Role</p><p>04:45 — Is Loneliness Really That Serious?</p><p>05:30 — Ubuntu and Community</p><p>07:00 — Adult Recess &amp; the Power of Play</p><p>09:00 — Rethinking Optimal Health</p><p>10:00 — Inside Chelsey’s Therapy Practice</p><p>11:00 — How Disconnection Shows Up in the Body</p><p>14:30 — The Hardest Step: Getting Out of the House</p><p>18:00 — Creating Safe, Welcoming Spaces</p><p>23:00 — What It Means to Be Seen</p><p>27:00 — Why Adults Lose Touch With Joy</p><p>31:00 — Teens, Tech, and Isolation</p><p>36:00 — One Simple Step to Improve Social Wellbeing</p><p>38:00 — Closing</p><p>💡 Connect and Learn More</p><p>Visit <a href="https://councilbh.org/">councilbh.org</a> to learn more about the Council on Black Health’s mission to advance health equity and reshape the future of Black wellness.</p><p>Follow us for future episodes, resources, and updates on how you can join the movement to reimagine what it means to be well.</p><p>Join us in achieving equity for generations. Donate to help the Council on Black Health drive lasting impact!<br>https://councilbh.app.neoncrm.com/forms/donate</p><p><br></p>]]>
      </description>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[<p>Loneliness isn’t just a feeling — it’s a public health crisis. In this episode of <em>Reimagining Black Health</em>, Dr. Melicia Whitt-Glover digs into the dimension of <strong>social wellbeing</strong>, exploring why real connection is as vital to our health as sleep, nutrition, and movement.</p><p><br>Guests <strong>Michele Paul</strong>, creator of <em>Let’s Get Social Raleigh</em> and founder of the Adult Recess movement, and <strong>Chelsey Reese</strong>, therapist and somatic practitioner, break down how community, joy, play, and vulnerability shape our emotional and physical health.</p><p><br>Together, they examine:</p><ul><li>Why loneliness raises the risks of heart disease, stroke, dementia, and early death<p></p></li><li>Why joy is a <em>birthright</em>, not something we have to earn<p></p></li><li>What “being seen” truly feels like — and why it's deeper than just being around people<p></p></li><li>How play and community events can spark radical healing<p></p></li><li>Practical, simple steps anyone can take this week to strengthen their own social wellbeing<p></p></li></ul><p>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.</p><p><br></p><p><br>EPISODE CHAPTERS — Social Wellbeing</p><p>00:00 — Joy as a Birthright</p><p>00:26 — What Is Social Wellbeing?</p><p>01:00 — Meet Michele Paul &amp; Chelsey Reese</p><p>01:20 — Loneliness as a Public Health Crisis</p><p>03:00 — Systemic Barriers to Connection</p><p>03:35 — Social Media’s Role</p><p>04:45 — Is Loneliness Really That Serious?</p><p>05:30 — Ubuntu and Community</p><p>07:00 — Adult Recess &amp; the Power of Play</p><p>09:00 — Rethinking Optimal Health</p><p>10:00 — Inside Chelsey’s Therapy Practice</p><p>11:00 — How Disconnection Shows Up in the Body</p><p>14:30 — The Hardest Step: Getting Out of the House</p><p>18:00 — Creating Safe, Welcoming Spaces</p><p>23:00 — What It Means to Be Seen</p><p>27:00 — Why Adults Lose Touch With Joy</p><p>31:00 — Teens, Tech, and Isolation</p><p>36:00 — One Simple Step to Improve Social Wellbeing</p><p>38:00 — Closing</p><p>💡 Connect and Learn More</p><p>Visit <a href="https://councilbh.org/">councilbh.org</a> to learn more about the Council on Black Health’s mission to advance health equity and reshape the future of Black wellness.</p><p>Follow us for future episodes, resources, and updates on how you can join the movement to reimagine what it means to be well.</p><p>Join us in achieving equity for generations. Donate to help the Council on Black Health drive lasting impact!<br>https://councilbh.app.neoncrm.com/forms/donate</p><p><br></p>]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <pubDate>Thu, 04 Dec 2025 03:00:00 -0500</pubDate>
      <author>Council on Black Health</author>
      <enclosure url="https://media.transistor.fm/f322c4cd/e40870ea.mp3" length="56025407" type="audio/mpeg"/>
      <itunes:author>Council on Black Health</itunes:author>
      <itunes:duration>2331</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>
        <![CDATA[<p>Loneliness isn’t just a feeling — it’s a public health crisis. In this episode of <em>Reimagining Black Health</em>, Dr. Melicia Whitt-Glover digs into the dimension of <strong>social wellbeing</strong>, exploring why real connection is as vital to our health as sleep, nutrition, and movement.</p><p><br>Guests <strong>Michele Paul</strong>, creator of <em>Let’s Get Social Raleigh</em> and founder of the Adult Recess movement, and <strong>Chelsey Reese</strong>, therapist and somatic practitioner, break down how community, joy, play, and vulnerability shape our emotional and physical health.</p><p><br>Together, they examine:</p><ul><li>Why loneliness raises the risks of heart disease, stroke, dementia, and early death<p></p></li><li>Why joy is a <em>birthright</em>, not something we have to earn<p></p></li><li>What “being seen” truly feels like — and why it's deeper than just being around people<p></p></li><li>How play and community events can spark radical healing<p></p></li><li>Practical, simple steps anyone can take this week to strengthen their own social wellbeing<p></p></li></ul><p>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.</p><p><br></p><p><br>EPISODE CHAPTERS — Social Wellbeing</p><p>00:00 — Joy as a Birthright</p><p>00:26 — What Is Social Wellbeing?</p><p>01:00 — Meet Michele Paul &amp; Chelsey Reese</p><p>01:20 — Loneliness as a Public Health Crisis</p><p>03:00 — Systemic Barriers to Connection</p><p>03:35 — Social Media’s Role</p><p>04:45 — Is Loneliness Really That Serious?</p><p>05:30 — Ubuntu and Community</p><p>07:00 — Adult Recess &amp; the Power of Play</p><p>09:00 — Rethinking Optimal Health</p><p>10:00 — Inside Chelsey’s Therapy Practice</p><p>11:00 — How Disconnection Shows Up in the Body</p><p>14:30 — The Hardest Step: Getting Out of the House</p><p>18:00 — Creating Safe, Welcoming Spaces</p><p>23:00 — What It Means to Be Seen</p><p>27:00 — Why Adults Lose Touch With Joy</p><p>31:00 — Teens, Tech, and Isolation</p><p>36:00 — One Simple Step to Improve Social Wellbeing</p><p>38:00 — Closing</p><p>💡 Connect and Learn More</p><p>Visit <a href="https://councilbh.org/">councilbh.org</a> to learn more about the Council on Black Health’s mission to advance health equity and reshape the future of Black wellness.</p><p>Follow us for future episodes, resources, and updates on how you can join the movement to reimagine what it means to be well.</p><p>Join us in achieving equity for generations. Donate to help the Council on Black Health drive lasting impact!<br>https://councilbh.app.neoncrm.com/forms/donate</p><p><br></p>]]>
      </itunes:summary>
      <itunes:keywords>Black health, health equity, wellness, mental health, optimal health, public health, Council on Black Health, Dr. Melicia Whitt-Glover</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>No</itunes:explicit>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>What Does Optimal Black Health Really Look Like?</title>
      <itunes:episode>1</itunes:episode>
      <podcast:episode>1</podcast:episode>
      <itunes:title>What Does Optimal Black Health Really Look Like?</itunes:title>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">4e1447ea-36ec-49ad-897d-619c62cfb45c</guid>
      <link>https://share.transistor.fm/s/1d67a698</link>
      <description>
        <![CDATA[<p>What does it mean to be <em>truly</em> well — not just free from illness, but whole, joyful, and liberated?<br> In this premiere episode of <em>Reimagining Black Health</em>, Dr. Melicia Whitt-Glover brings together a dynamic panel — physician and activist <strong>Dr. L. Toni Lewis</strong>, wellness advocate <strong>Jerica Robinson</strong>, and trainer <strong>Antoine Hudson</strong> — to unpack how health extends beyond numbers on a chart.</p><p><br>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.</p><p><strong>⏱️ Episode Chapters</strong></p><p><strong>00:00 – Introduction:</strong> Redefining “health” beyond the medical model<br> <strong>02:00 – The Wellness Trap:</strong> Are challenges like “75 Hard” helping or harming?<br> <strong>06:30 – Anti-Grind Culture:</strong> Dr. Toni Lewis on rest as resistance<br> <strong>10:00 – Joy and Liberation:</strong> Why community, play, and happiness matter<br> <strong>17:00 – Defining Optimal Health:</strong> Perspectives across generations<br> <strong>29:00 – Decentering Grind Culture:</strong> Setting boundaries and working smarter<br> <strong>39:00 – Balancing Roles:</strong> The cost of “doing it all”<br> <strong>44:00 – Takeaway Round:</strong> One thing you can do this week to move toward optimal health<br> <strong>50:00 – Closing Reflections:</strong> A win is a win — give yourself grace</p><p><br></p><p><strong>💡 Connect and Learn More</strong></p><p>Visit <a href="https://councilbh.org">councilbh.org</a> to learn more about the Council on Black Health’s mission to advance health equity and reshape the future of Black wellness.<br> Follow us for future episodes, resources, and updates on how you can join the movement to reimagine what it means to be well.</p><p>Join us in achieving equity for generations. Donate to help the Council on Black Health drive lasting impact!<br>https://councilbh.app.neoncrm.com/forms/donate</p>]]>
      </description>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[<p>What does it mean to be <em>truly</em> well — not just free from illness, but whole, joyful, and liberated?<br> In this premiere episode of <em>Reimagining Black Health</em>, Dr. Melicia Whitt-Glover brings together a dynamic panel — physician and activist <strong>Dr. L. Toni Lewis</strong>, wellness advocate <strong>Jerica Robinson</strong>, and trainer <strong>Antoine Hudson</strong> — to unpack how health extends beyond numbers on a chart.</p><p><br>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.</p><p><strong>⏱️ Episode Chapters</strong></p><p><strong>00:00 – Introduction:</strong> Redefining “health” beyond the medical model<br> <strong>02:00 – The Wellness Trap:</strong> Are challenges like “75 Hard” helping or harming?<br> <strong>06:30 – Anti-Grind Culture:</strong> Dr. Toni Lewis on rest as resistance<br> <strong>10:00 – Joy and Liberation:</strong> Why community, play, and happiness matter<br> <strong>17:00 – Defining Optimal Health:</strong> Perspectives across generations<br> <strong>29:00 – Decentering Grind Culture:</strong> Setting boundaries and working smarter<br> <strong>39:00 – Balancing Roles:</strong> The cost of “doing it all”<br> <strong>44:00 – Takeaway Round:</strong> One thing you can do this week to move toward optimal health<br> <strong>50:00 – Closing Reflections:</strong> A win is a win — give yourself grace</p><p><br></p><p><strong>💡 Connect and Learn More</strong></p><p>Visit <a href="https://councilbh.org">councilbh.org</a> to learn more about the Council on Black Health’s mission to advance health equity and reshape the future of Black wellness.<br> Follow us for future episodes, resources, and updates on how you can join the movement to reimagine what it means to be well.</p><p>Join us in achieving equity for generations. Donate to help the Council on Black Health drive lasting impact!<br>https://councilbh.app.neoncrm.com/forms/donate</p>]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <pubDate>Thu, 20 Nov 2025 15:27:20 -0500</pubDate>
      <author>Council on Black Health</author>
      <enclosure url="https://media.transistor.fm/1d67a698/48800f3a.mp3" length="72887551" type="audio/mpeg"/>
      <itunes:author>Council on Black Health</itunes:author>
      <itunes:duration>3032</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>
        <![CDATA[<p>What does it mean to be <em>truly</em> well — not just free from illness, but whole, joyful, and liberated?<br> In this premiere episode of <em>Reimagining Black Health</em>, Dr. Melicia Whitt-Glover brings together a dynamic panel — physician and activist <strong>Dr. L. Toni Lewis</strong>, wellness advocate <strong>Jerica Robinson</strong>, and trainer <strong>Antoine Hudson</strong> — to unpack how health extends beyond numbers on a chart.</p><p><br>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.</p><p><strong>⏱️ Episode Chapters</strong></p><p><strong>00:00 – Introduction:</strong> Redefining “health” beyond the medical model<br> <strong>02:00 – The Wellness Trap:</strong> Are challenges like “75 Hard” helping or harming?<br> <strong>06:30 – Anti-Grind Culture:</strong> Dr. Toni Lewis on rest as resistance<br> <strong>10:00 – Joy and Liberation:</strong> Why community, play, and happiness matter<br> <strong>17:00 – Defining Optimal Health:</strong> Perspectives across generations<br> <strong>29:00 – Decentering Grind Culture:</strong> Setting boundaries and working smarter<br> <strong>39:00 – Balancing Roles:</strong> The cost of “doing it all”<br> <strong>44:00 – Takeaway Round:</strong> One thing you can do this week to move toward optimal health<br> <strong>50:00 – Closing Reflections:</strong> A win is a win — give yourself grace</p><p><br></p><p><strong>💡 Connect and Learn More</strong></p><p>Visit <a href="https://councilbh.org">councilbh.org</a> to learn more about the Council on Black Health’s mission to advance health equity and reshape the future of Black wellness.<br> Follow us for future episodes, resources, and updates on how you can join the movement to reimagine what it means to be well.</p><p>Join us in achieving equity for generations. Donate to help the Council on Black Health drive lasting impact!<br>https://councilbh.app.neoncrm.com/forms/donate</p>]]>
      </itunes:summary>
      <itunes:keywords>Black health, health equity, wellness, mental health, optimal health, public health, Council on Black Health, Dr. Melicia Whitt-Glover</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>No</itunes:explicit>
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