New Free E-Guide - Embrace Your Blackness - A Revolutionary Guide in an Anti-Black World

New Free E-Guide - Embrace Your Blackness - A Revolutionary Guide in an Anti-Black World ⋆

Episode 242: Experiencing Black Joy: An Interview with Storyteller Gran'daddy Junebug
Black History, Black Culture Robin Lofton Black History, Black Culture Robin Lofton

Episode 242: Experiencing Black Joy: An Interview with Storyteller Gran'daddy Junebug

Racial encounters often cause headaches, insomnia, trembling, stomach pain, and many other physical ailments. In this uncommon episode, the Espresso Talk Today team is joined by a special guest who discusses a racial encounter at a department store that left her feeling terrified, vulnerable, and dehumanized.

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Episode 166: Black Inventors are saving lives but are still ignored. Who are they?
Black History Robin Lofton Black History Robin Lofton

Episode 166: Black Inventors are saving lives but are still ignored. Who are they?

Police violence. White supremacy and terror. Dehumanizing behavior. Systemic racism. Everywhere. Every day. African Americans and other people of color face constant threats not only to their physical safety but also to their mental health. This leads to high levels of stress, anxiety, depression, and other mental illnesses. Racism-induced stress also reduces the life expectancy and quality of life for many African Americans. Add poverty, lack of health care, inadequate housing, and reduced access to good nutrition and clean water to this deadly cocktail and there is another "pandemic" rooted in racism. Many African Americans are seeking methods to protect their mental health and reduce stress and anxiety. One effective method is meditation, which has proven benefits of fighting stress and anxiety, reducing depression, and improving the quality of life--on mental and physical levels. In this special episode, Robin will discuss the unique stresses faced by African Americans and the benefits of meditation. She will also guide three short meditations to introduce the practice of meditation and provide instant stress relief during these turbulent times. You will not want to miss this episode!

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Episode 38: Beyond Black History Month: We still need Black History!
Black History Robin Lofton Black History Robin Lofton

Episode 38: Beyond Black History Month: We still need Black History!

No, it's not Black History Month but Black history is still important. Protests. Marches. Covid pandemic. Police violence. Systemic racism. These are not new in American history. Yet many people have forgotten how these events have had a regular presence throughout American (and perhaps world) history. Are we doomed to repeat the failures of the past? Have we learned how to approach these important issues effectively? Robin and Hans think that history is important but that it is not getting the attention needed to have an impact.

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Episode 33: The Case for Harvard to Return Slave Photos
Black History Robin Lofton Black History Robin Lofton

Episode 33: The Case for Harvard to Return Slave Photos

For more than 200 years, Harvard University has been profiting from the photos of an enslaved man (named "Renty") and his daughter. Their descendants want the photos returned and they are taking the powerful university to court. Many universities are finally admitting their participation in and profit from African slavery. A few universities are making reparations; others are only making apologies. What will Harvard do?

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Episode 28: Who are America's Black Founders?
Black History Robin Lofton Black History Robin Lofton

Episode 28: Who are America's Black Founders?

America's original Founders--Jefferson, Adams, Franklin, and others--were revolutionaries and resisters. They created a new nation but also a new relationship between the government and the people. Yet there were omissions, problems, conflicts, and racism. They never reached a clear decision on slavery, the rights of women, or the rights of the indigenous populations. Work remained to be done. America's new Founders were also revolutionaries and resisters but they were more committed to the Republican ideals of equality, freedom, and individual rights for all people. They are often not revered like the original Founders but their accomplishments were arguably greater, definitely more egalitarian.

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Episode 25: Gratitude Meditations for Juneteenth and Beyond
Black History Robin Lofton Black History Robin Lofton

Episode 25: Gratitude Meditations for Juneteenth and Beyond

The Covid-19 pandemic. Police Violence. White supremacy and terror. Dehumanizing events. Micro-aggressions. Systemic racism. Everywhere. Every day. We, as African Americans and other people of color, face constant threats not only to our physical safety but also to our mental health and security. You might then ask: "What do I have to be grateful for?" Answer: A lot! And this is not to diminish the real threats and actions that we are hearing about and seeing every day. But gratitude is not about them. It's about you.

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Episode 16: The Untold History of African American Presidential Candidates
Black History Robin Lofton Black History Robin Lofton

Episode 16: The Untold History of African American Presidential Candidates

Do you know how many African Americans have run for President of the United States? The history books are filled with the names and stories of White men (and a few White women) who have run for the world's most powerful political office. Forgotten are the African Americans--both men and women--who have run for President of the United States. From the great orator and abolitionist, Frederick Douglass, to the fiery and bold activist, Cynthia McKinney, and beyond, African Americans have taken the courageous (and dangerous) step to be the leader of the free world. Some ran as candidates of the major political parties.

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Episode 9: A Most Shocking and Inhumane Form of Discrimination
Black History Robin Lofton Black History Robin Lofton

Episode 9: A Most Shocking and Inhumane Form of Discrimination

The health care system in the United States is marked by racial discrimination and bias. From the Reconstruction Era until the present, African Americans have experienced racial discrimination in access to and treatment under the health care system. Many are aware of the Tuskegee experiments but other lesser-known situations have also occurred such as the case of Henrietta Lacks, a Black woman who died of cancer in 1951 whose cells were "stolen" and used to make cancer drugs.

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