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I finished The Miseducation of the Negro on the last day of Black History Month and the same day I completed Module 1 of my certification in African Black Psychology (CABP) through ABPsi. I did not plan that. And by the time you finish this episode, you will understand why I am telling you it landed the way it did.
These final chapters are Woodson's turn from diagnosis to prescription. After eighteen chapters of precise, painful evidence, he asks: what do we build instead? His answer is reconstruction from a completely different foundation. Built on self-knowledge. Built on Black genius. Built on the radicalism that rises from within because the outside was never coming.
ABPsi has been part of my world since early 2025 — I attended my first conference last July, where I had the extraordinary experience of meeting Baba Wade Nobles and Na'im Akbar. The CABP is what I registered for around Christmas. And Module One — which opened with the Kemetic seven-element model of the human being, the deep cultural structures of African peoples across the diaspora as the foundation of the science, and the transmission that if the ancestors are not lost, neither are we — landed on the same day I closed this book. That is not coincidence. That is Spirit.
In this episode I also work through Woodson's economic argument on imitation versus innovation, Dr. Linda James Myers on the nature of power, what I witnessed at a Black History Month fair, and the warmth and competence dynamic I lived as a vendor and as someone who had material access in a community navigating manufactured scarcity. Woodson was describing that psychology in 1933. It is still producing its outputs now.
This is Arc I, Episode 4. The Miseducation of the Negro is complete. We are naming the distortion with our own language now. And we have the institutions our ancestors built to hold us while we do.
Keywords: Carter G. Woodson, Miseducation of the Negro, ABPsi, Association of Black Psychologists, CABP certification, African Black psychology, Kemetic philosophy, seven elements holistic human model, Ka Ba Khaba Akhu Seb Putah Atmu, Sakhu, Wade Nobles, Jegna, Jegnaship, optimal psychology, Linda James Myers, APA walkout 1968, Black self-determination, imitation vs innovation, radicalism from within, Black political autonomy, Black History Month, Tree of Life, African worldview, mother-mind, diaspora, Arc I We Been Knew
By Reimagining Work, Empowering People, Building Futures.I finished The Miseducation of the Negro on the last day of Black History Month and the same day I completed Module 1 of my certification in African Black Psychology (CABP) through ABPsi. I did not plan that. And by the time you finish this episode, you will understand why I am telling you it landed the way it did.
These final chapters are Woodson's turn from diagnosis to prescription. After eighteen chapters of precise, painful evidence, he asks: what do we build instead? His answer is reconstruction from a completely different foundation. Built on self-knowledge. Built on Black genius. Built on the radicalism that rises from within because the outside was never coming.
ABPsi has been part of my world since early 2025 — I attended my first conference last July, where I had the extraordinary experience of meeting Baba Wade Nobles and Na'im Akbar. The CABP is what I registered for around Christmas. And Module One — which opened with the Kemetic seven-element model of the human being, the deep cultural structures of African peoples across the diaspora as the foundation of the science, and the transmission that if the ancestors are not lost, neither are we — landed on the same day I closed this book. That is not coincidence. That is Spirit.
In this episode I also work through Woodson's economic argument on imitation versus innovation, Dr. Linda James Myers on the nature of power, what I witnessed at a Black History Month fair, and the warmth and competence dynamic I lived as a vendor and as someone who had material access in a community navigating manufactured scarcity. Woodson was describing that psychology in 1933. It is still producing its outputs now.
This is Arc I, Episode 4. The Miseducation of the Negro is complete. We are naming the distortion with our own language now. And we have the institutions our ancestors built to hold us while we do.
Keywords: Carter G. Woodson, Miseducation of the Negro, ABPsi, Association of Black Psychologists, CABP certification, African Black psychology, Kemetic philosophy, seven elements holistic human model, Ka Ba Khaba Akhu Seb Putah Atmu, Sakhu, Wade Nobles, Jegna, Jegnaship, optimal psychology, Linda James Myers, APA walkout 1968, Black self-determination, imitation vs innovation, radicalism from within, Black political autonomy, Black History Month, Tree of Life, African worldview, mother-mind, diaspora, Arc I We Been Knew