What a heartwarming conversation with my dear friend Thérèse Cator.
In this episode, Thérèse and I discuss the effects of assimilation on our bodies, healing, identity, and more. We also discuss how healing can emerge when we are in spaces where we can be in our full humanity and don't have to be in a state of hypervigilance.
Bio:
Thérèse Cator is the founder of Embodied Black Girl, a global community that centers the healing and liberation of Black women and femmes and communities of color. She’s also a mother, a Decolonial Leadership Mentor, a Somatic Experiencing Practitioner, an anti-oppression facilitator, an artist and a medicine keeper from a deep lineage of scholars, medicine people and revolutionaries from Ayiti.
Thérèse's work has been featured multiple times in both Forbes and Mashable, as well as Essence, Travel Noire, Jezebel, Authority Magazine, Mind Body Green, Motherly, and Yahoo News, among others.
Over the past 15 years, she's worked with people from all backgrounds, and her work explores the intersection of spirituality, somatics and social change. Thérèse's work exists in the world to provide deep counsel and guidance to cultural shapers to heal intergenerationally, unearth their deepest expression of embodied leadership and birth revolutionary work and worlds.
You can learn more at: www.embodiedblackgirl.com and www.theresecator.com and find her on IG @theresecator
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