Épisodes

  • Lessons from Liberation; The Game of Life
    Jan 28 2026

    Lessons from Liberation | Episode 3: The Game of Life The Freed Black Girl Podcast

    Lessons from Liberation is a mini episode series on what I’ve learned about what comes after freedom.

    Leave a comment, like & subscribe. Leave a 5 star review everywhere you get your podcasts. Visit: www.freedblackgirl.com for more about my Liberation Coaching, production services, the podcast merch store, and more.

    In this episode of Lessons from Liberation, I reflect on what happens after the leap—when you’re in a new space, feeling unsure, and looking for a map that doesn’t exist. Drawing from my blog post The Game of Life on The Freedom Pages, I explore what it means to realize the answer was never meant to come from a map.

    This episode is centered on trust and movement: getting out of the menu and into the game, remembering that our ancestors already walked this terrain and left wisdom for us to use now.

    Drawing from reflection and ancestral memory, I share:

    • Why the path only appears as you move
    • How fear keeps us frozen instead of playing
    • What it means to be guided instead of directed
    • Why our ancestors want to be in relationship with us
    • How their courage still teaches us how to live, love, and choose

    This episode also includes reflection questions for you—whether you’re feeling isolated in a new chapter or standing at the edge of something unknown.

    Journal with me:

    • What examples do you have in your lineage of your ancestors’ courage and bravery?
    • If you don’t know those stories, who can you ask?
    • What would you try if you knew you couldn’t fail?
    • How do you define failure? Is it failure if you learn and move forward?
    • What permission are you waiting on to begin your new journey?
    • Where do you feel fear in your body when you think about the unknown?

    ✨ New episodes of Lessons from Liberation drop weekly.

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    16 min
  • Lessons from Liberation: Quantum Leaping
    Jan 21 2026

    Lessons from Liberation | Episode 2: Quantum Leaping The Freed Black Girl Podcast

    Lessons from Liberation is a mini episode series on what I’ve learned about what comes after freedom.

    Leave a comment, like & subscribe. Leave a 5 star review everywhere you get your podcasts. Visit: www.freedblackgirl.com for more about my Liberation Coaching, production services, the podcast merch store, and more.

    In this second episode of Lessons from Liberation, I reflect on what comes after surrender—when the path disappears and you’re asked to leap anyway. Drawing inspiration from the show Quantum Leap, I explore what it means to wake up in a new timeline while still remembering your old life.

    This episode is centered on release and trust: letting go of old identities, survival strategies, and scripts that no longer fit so you can fully enter what’s next.

    Drawing from a blog post I wrote in real time last year on The Freedom Pages, I share:

    • What it feels like to leap without a map

    • Why freedom requires releasing who you used to be

    • How we often wait for others to tell us who we are

    • What it means to trust yourself, Spirit, and the unknown

    • Why you’ve likely leapt before—and can do it again

    This episode also includes reflection questions for you—whether you’re standing at the edge of a new beginning or already mid-leap.

    Journal with me:

    • When have you leapt before, even when you were afraid?

    • What old identity or attachment is it time to release?

    • What comfort is that attachment providing?

    • What would it look like to choose evolution instead of repeating the same cycle?

    • What is the best that could happen if you let go and fly?

    ✨ New episodes of Lessons from Liberation drop weekly.

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    11 min
  • Lessons from Liberation; The Surrender
    Jan 14 2026

    Lessons from Liberation | Episode 1: The Surrender The Freed Black Girl Podcast

    Lessons from Liberation is a mini episode series on what I’ve learned about what comes after freedom.

    • Leave a comment, like & subscribe. Leave a 5 star review everywhere you get your podcasts. And share with someone you think would benefit.
    • Visit: www.freedblackgirl.com for more about my Liberation Coaching, production services, the podcast merch store, and more.

    In this first episode of Lessons from Liberation, I open a new chapter of The Freed Black Girl Podcast by reflecting on what comes after the stage of healing—when you’ve left the cave, but the world feels loud & unfamiliar.

    This episode is centered on surrender: learning how to get still, make space, and listen for what’s trying to reach you. Drawing from a blog post I wrote in real time last year on The Freedom Pages blog, I share:

    • What I learned after stepping away from a familiar career

    • How stillness unlocked creativity, play, and ancestral memory

    • Why freedom requires space

    • And how surrender became a practice, not a collapse

    This episode also includes reflection questions for you—whether you’re still fighting your way through the cave or emerging into a new world of possibility.

    Journal with me:

    • What is your relationship with stillness?

    • How do you avoid being alone with your own thoughts?

    • What might be trying to reach you if you made more space?

    ✨ New episodes of Lessons from Liberation drop weekly.

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    10 min
  • Remember Our Teachers™; MLK & the Dream of a Revolutionary
    Jan 20 2025

    What does it mean to truly remember our teachers? On this special bonus episode and season 2 preview, we honor Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and his evolving vision for freedom, community, and justice as we reflect on his powerful 1967 speech, “Where Do We Go From Here: Chaos or Community?” Through excerpts from his words, we delve into the radical clarity he held in his final years and explore what his lessons mean for us today.

    Season 2, coming in March 2025, invites us to reconnect with our teachers—those who came before us, who dared to dream beyond the white patriarchal gaze. Our ancestors dared to imagine a world that transcended oppression, one rooted in love, joy, and community. They persisted against unimaginable violence and grief. How did they sustain themselves? What can we learn from their resilience to guide our path in navigating these current times?

    It’s not just about survival—it’s about creating something entirely new. A new way to live. A new way to love. A new way to be free.

    www.freedblackgirl.com

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    42 min
  • Ep.12 Freed Joy; The world didn't give it, the world can't take it away!
    Nov 21 2024

    You all are in for a treat with this Season 1 Finale. I knew when I started this podcast I wanted to end the season speaking about Joy. When working with my coaching clients to explore their niche in their business, I always start with the question “what brings you joy, that solves a problem/ fills a need for other people, that you’re good at & that they’ll pay you for?

    They would be able to come up with 3 out of 4, but the first one got them stuck, the joy. What is joy? Where does it come from? What does it feel like? Why is it scary? I still ask myself these questions as well, beyond my work, but in who I am, and in just being. I'm so grateful to have the author of Black Joy on to dig in!

    As a writer and thought-leader, Tracey Michae’l Lewis-Giggetts offers those who read her work and hear her speak an authentic experience; an opportunity to explore the intersection of culture, identity, and spirituality at the deepest levels. She is the founder of HeARTspace, a healing community created to serve those who have experienced trauma of any kind through the use of storytelling and the arts.

    Tracey has published 25 books including several collaborations with numerous high-profile authors. Calling herself a “literary midwife,” Tracey is a highly sought-after ghostwriter/collaborator whose work includes two New York Times bestselling books by Tabitha Brown, Better Not Bitter by Yusef Salaam, Sideshow by Rickey Smiley, and many others. In 2021, Tracey became one of 20 writers who contributed to the groundbreaking book, You are Your Best Thing: Vulnerability, Shame Resilience, and the Black Experience edited by acclaimed researcher, Brene Brown, and founder of the MeToo Movement, Tarana Burke.

    In 2022, Tracey's critically-acclaimed book, Black Joy: Stories of Resistance, Resilience, and Restoration was published and won the 2023 NAACP Image Award for Outstanding Literary Work - Instructional and has received rave reviews from celebrities like Kerry Washington and media outlets like Good Morning America, Essence Magazine, and USA Today. Her dynamic journal/ daily devotional, The Black Joy Playbook: 30 Days to Intentionally Reclaiming Your Delight released on October 29, 2024.

    #joy #blackjoy #innerchildhealing #collectiveliberation

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    1 h et 16 min
  • Ep. 11 Freed Vote; Protecting our rights & fighting misinformation
    Nov 4 2024

    This Election Bonus episode channels our best School House Rock, and discussing the mechanics of Election Day. From not automatically expecting immediate results and tuning out the noise trying to drive chaos. As well as where to turn if you run into any issues at the polls. Nothing beats anxiety like information!

    Double check registration and FAQs: https://www.vote411.org Election Protection Hotline: 1-866-OUR-VOTE

    Marcia Johnson, Esq. is the Chief Counsel for the League of Women Voters. She leads the organization's advocacy and litigation teams. Before joining the League, Marcia worked as the co-director of the Lawyers’ Committee’s Voting Rights Project, where she led the organization’s work convening the nationally recognized Election Protection, a nonpartisan voter protection coalition.

    The coalition’s goals include ensuring that voters have any support needed when casting a ballot. Marcia has also done extensive work researching the history of discrimination in voting, advocating for legislation reform to improve access to voting, and advocating for the full restoration of the full protections of the Voting Rights Act.

    Marcia’s work throughout her career has profoundly impacted the nation. She played a pivotal role organizing two national commissions that researched the record of discrimination in voting within the United States. Commission findings were a significant part of the record that Congress pointed to when it reauthorized the Voting Rights Act in 2006.

    The League of Women Voters is a nonpartisan, grassroots organization working to protect and expand voting rights and ensure everyone is represented in our democracy. They empower voters and defend democracy through advocacy, education, and litigation, at the local, state, and national levels.

    #vote #informationispower #shirleychisholm #collectiveliberation

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    34 min
  • Ep. 10 Freed Identity; Who Do You Love? Are You For Sure?
    Oct 31 2024

    Coming out later in life can feel like finding parts of yourself that have been hidden in plain sight. In this episode, we explore the lack of affirming visibility for Queer Black Women especially and its impact on our identity development. Also how our minds and bodies-through somatic responses —keep us safe by not allowing us to see ourselves, even subconsciously. Because belonging is a human need for survival. It's a journey of unlearning, self-acceptance, and finally embracing who we've always been.

    One of the biggest things that l've become more deeply aware of since coming out is just how much patriarchy is hurting all of us, especially when it comes to living the fullest expression of authentic ourselves. Most people are extremely repressed when it comes to relationships and sexuality because we are all trying to fit into the same mold, and the very real dangers associated with realizing you are your own blueprint & stepping outside of what is deemed the norm.

    Today's guest, Victoria D. Stubbs, LICSW, LCSW-C, RMT, is a therapist, educator, wellness coach, writer, reiki practitioner, psychic medium and the founder of Inner Truth Psychotherapy and Wellness, LLC. Victoria’s practice combines her over 20 years of social work and teaching experience with her intuitive abilities to offer a space for healing and growth to all who seek it.

    Her areas of practice include coming out later in life, sexuality & gender identity, anxiety, trauma, relationships, life transitions and stress. She also offers clinical supervision & consultation as well as mediumship sessions. Victoria has co-authored several peer reviewed journal articles, is a contributing writer for QueerPsych.com and is the author of Untangled: A Black Woman’s Journey to Personal, Spiritual and Sexual Freedom.

    https://www.innertruthllc.com/

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    1 h et 25 min
  • Ep. 9 Freed Power; Origins of a Radical Black Girl
    Oct 24 2024

    Discussing My early lessons on the power of people, collective liberation, and our upcoming election.

    As a kid, I heard stories about my maternal grandmother hosting friends like Dick Gregory and other civil rights leaders in her home when they were in town. Or about how my mother was involved in the Black Panther Party when she was a teen/ young adult in the 60s & 70s. I remember growing up with a poster of Malcom X on the wall by our front door. The image of him looking out the window with a shot gun.

    My first protest was at age 11 for a grocery store in a neighborhood that I now know as a food desert. This continued to and through college, and beyond. In this next episode of the podcast I talk about these early lessons of our power to collectively push for a different future. I also discuss reconciling the feelings of my desire for the liberation of ALL people and the potential of our first Black Woman President.

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    1 min