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"Because of them, I can live. Because of me, many will live after me." -Latosha Brown
In this episode, civil rights organizer and Black Voters Matter co-founder LaTosha Brown joins Gabrielle for a powerful conversation about beginning again. From her roots in Alabama's Black Belt to her early lessons in power and justice, LaTosha shares how she learned to lead with love even in the face of challenge. She opens up about transforming her relationship with rest from exhaustion as a badge of honor to embracing it as revolutionary practice, and reflects on her three-dimensional view of legacy—individual, collective, and universal. LaTosha also discusses taking up space boldly during her political campaign, choosing community care over confrontation in organizing work, and her vision for moving from citizenship to nation-building. A moving exploration of grief, joy, imagination, and what it means to be founders of the world we deserve.
By Gabrielle Wyatt"Because of them, I can live. Because of me, many will live after me." -Latosha Brown
In this episode, civil rights organizer and Black Voters Matter co-founder LaTosha Brown joins Gabrielle for a powerful conversation about beginning again. From her roots in Alabama's Black Belt to her early lessons in power and justice, LaTosha shares how she learned to lead with love even in the face of challenge. She opens up about transforming her relationship with rest from exhaustion as a badge of honor to embracing it as revolutionary practice, and reflects on her three-dimensional view of legacy—individual, collective, and universal. LaTosha also discusses taking up space boldly during her political campaign, choosing community care over confrontation in organizing work, and her vision for moving from citizenship to nation-building. A moving exploration of grief, joy, imagination, and what it means to be founders of the world we deserve.