DiscoverWhatcha Ain't Gon' Do! (The Joy of Setting Personal Boundaries)
Whatcha Ain't Gon' Do! (The Joy of Setting Personal Boundaries)
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Whatcha Ain't Gon' Do! (The Joy of Setting Personal Boundaries)

Author: Hawk & Heron, LLC

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"Whatcha Ain't Gon' Do!" is a little podcast about the joy of setting boundaries: mental/emotional boundaries, physical boundaries, philosophical boundaries--you name it! I'll try to keep each episode short and sweet--no more than twenty minutes long, in most cases--so that you and I can help each other gain clarity by getting straight to the point. Some episodes will just be my musings on some boundary-setting that I have either done or still need to do in life. Some episodes will feature me and some trusted co-hosts, and we may even have a guest or two from time to time. Expect a new episode every Wednesday around noon, to help you get over the mid-week hump. So, please subscribe and join me on this journey of learning to feel good about saying "No!" to other folk's agendas and "Yes!" to ourselves and our dreams. You may be and do a lot of things, but "Whatcha Ain't Gon' Do" is miss this podcast, right? Love ya!
38 Episodes
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ABWHE Zoom!

ABWHE Zoom!

2020-04-2900:10

The ABWHE sisters get together to learn about podcasting!
Wishing you all the best- for 2021! I'll be keeping my nose to the grindstone (ouch!) and getting a few projects done. What's on your agenda for the new year? Let's all start with a bit of gratitude because we survived 2020 (sheesh...) and keep looking toward the future. Love ya!
Nothing to heavy this episode! Just checking in to see how you're doing...and to ask whether you're thinking about what's on the other side of the pandemic...
The ABWHE ladies (Kuan, Michelle, Valerie, and Juanita) and I get together for another wide-ranging conversation, and, this time, the topic is "Polite Racism." Whew! Ain't NOTHING polite about it. It hurts in so many ways, and it takes so many ugly forms. Join the conversation-and please forgive the audio quality. Recording a podcast over Zoom isn't the best situation, but it's what the pandemic dictates. Hopefully, I'll find a better safely-socially-distanced alternative for the next season of the show!
If you're like me, then you're a "ten toes down" loyal friend who believes what your friends tell you...but what happens when your friend tells you that they're the victim in a situation, and you later learn that your friend is actually the *problem*? Hmmm...
It's only right that we take care of the elders in our family and our village--but eldercare is more than a notion (as the elders are wont to say)! How do you balance living your own life with taking good, loving care of the very people who gave you life? Join my conversation with my dear sisterfriends, Michelle and Juanita, as we try to figure this out. The secret weapons in this battle? Grace, respect, empathy, and friendship...
This week, I need a favor from you! First, please listen to some old episodes of "Whatcha Ain't Gon' Do!" Maybe there's an episode that you missed, or just one that you really enjoyed...either way, please give it another spin and share the show with a friend (send them to www.wagdpodcast.com)! Next, think about your own creative "crates," and dust off some pieces from your "creative catalogue." Finish that poem, that painting, or that piece of music you started but never finished. Break out that fabulous thing that you made ages ago, but were afraid to share with the world. This week, I want you to remind yourself of your own talents!
Senator Kamala Harris has already affirmed that she was born Black, she'll die Black, and she's proud to be Black. That assertion of her identity makes her Black enough for me...and it ought to make her Black enough for you.
 So-called "White Supremacy." "White privilege." Why do some people hold onto these expressions of "Whiteness" (which is a fiction anyway) so tightly? When you remove "Whiteness" from someone's identity and worldview, what's left? This week, my super-smart sister-friends from the Association of Black Women in Higher Education pick up our conversation that centers on the question: "Is Whiteness really all you got?" We talk about generational differences in combating racism (this "I'm not my Ancestors, and you can catch these hands!" stuff isn't really new), getting caught up in anti-Blackness at work (listen--when you're the new Black Person at your job, don't disrespect the Seasoned Black Person at your job). What happens when Black folk pull ourselves up by our bootstraps (the ones we had to make from nothing)? Tulsa? Rosewood? Tune in and join us (and we apologize in advance: we cuss a little).
Your girl is TIRED--so I'm taking a break this week! Check out this quick episode to find out where I am, and what's in the queue for the next few episodes. Take care of yourselves! Love ya!
So-called "White Supremacy." "White privilege." Why do some people hold onto these expressions of "Whiteness" (which is a fiction anyway) so tightly? When you remove "Whiteness" from someone's identity, what's left? This week, my super-smart sister-friends and I tackle this question: "Is Whiteness really all you got?"
Don't call it a comeback--we've been here for a whole year!
Let me tell you a little story about how the Coronavirus Quarantine almost made me have to chop off all of my hair (or "How Faux Locs Almost Became Dreadlocks"). 
Don't let the press-n-curl fool you. Aunt Jemima isn't who or what you think she is...and you don't really care about the "success" of the women who've portrayed her. 
The sign reads "If Black Lives Matter, Then Stop Black on Black Killing. Period." Ummmm...what do you *do* with *that*? 
Violent protest doesn’t ask for permission—neither mine nor yours. It doesn’t need our permission. Nor does it want our permission. When lives are at stake, permission is just another form of oppression, and protest--violent AND peaceful--seeks and serves to end that oppression. To remove the foot—or knee—that was so violently placed on the collective neck of the oppressed. The oppressor never asks permission to hurt, maim, rape, asphyxiate, or murder the oppressed, so why do we keep insisting that the oppressed seek the approval of their oppressors? Again, you know the answer to that question. 
While I might not quite have known where I wanted this episode to start, I do know how I want it to end—and I know what boundaries I want us Black folk to set, at least today.  What we ain’t gon’ do—not if we really want to be good and kind to ourselves, especially we Black folk in America--is harm ourselves by voluntarily watching yet another lynching...You don’t need to witness a lynching to know that its perpetrators are wicked….and you definitely don’t need to witness a lynching more than one time to be sure of that fact.
I'm Baaaa-aaack!

I'm Baaaa-aaack!

2020-05-0106:10

Don’t ever disrespect the people whose blood flows through your veins, whose DNA you carry, whose stories you are supposed to tell. Should you ever have the occasion to confront a racist up close and personally, whatever you choose to do and however you choose to do it—do it because you ARE your ancestors. This week, and hopefully from here on out, whatcha ain’t gon’ do, is forget that it was our ancestors who taught us how to resist.
New episodes of this podcast are forthcoming--but, for now, your girl needs a break!
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