
Softness Is Sacred: Why Juneteenth Is A Reminder For Black Women To Rest
Living in Denver opened my eyes to the true significance of Juneteenth. While it might sound surprising, the Mile High City hosts an extensive Juneteenth celebration in Five Points, a neighborhood with deep Black roots. It was there, amid the vibrant festivities, that I truly began to grasp the holiday's importance.
Juneteenth, commemorating the end of slavery in the United States, provides a powerful opportunity to examine the vital need for rest and restoration. This observance aligns seamlessly with the burgeoning Black women's wellness movement. It champions self-care, mental health, and spiritual healing as essential tools for resilience and liberation.
A growing number of Black women are reclaiming their time and energy through the intentional pursuit of rest. Because the truth is, the 92% is tired.
Doulas are guiding mothers with compassionate care. Therapists are providing safe spaces for processing trauma and building emotional strength. Spiritual practitioners are leading individuals towards inner peace and holistic well-being. These practitioners are not simply offering services. They are advocating for a fundamental shift in how Black women approach their lives. They are actively challenging societal expectations of constant productivity and self-sacrifice. Instead, we want to embrace softness, joy, and restorative practices.
Above all, the notion of rest as a reparative practice is particularly significant considering the historical and ongoing challenges faced by Black women. Centuries of systemic oppression, coupled with the everyday microaggressions and societal pressures, have taken a toll. Rest, therefore, is not simply leisure. It becomes an act of resistance and a powerful step towards healing. By prioritizing our well-being, Black women are honoring their own needs. We are laying the foundation for a more sustainable and fulfilling future. Juneteenth serves as a poignant reminder of this ongoing journey towards liberation. Markedly, both personal and collective, softness and joy are seen as sacred components of a life well-lived.
Ahead, find some brilliant Black women doing the work to make sure we understand that rest is a right and not a reward.
First and foremost, the founder of The Nap Ministry, she frames rest as resistance—teaching collective napping workshops and soul-care rituals that challenge burnout culture, especially in Black communities.
As the founder of Black Girl Magik, she holds ancestral, spiritually rooted sister-circles for Black women, focused on joy, healing, and communal vulnerability.
An ordained Zen priest and author, she leads mindfulness practices through Zen-based meditation and teachings—emphasizing radical self-care, fearlessness, and spiritual softness.
Then, we have the founder of Therapy for Black Girls. She offers culturally affirming therapy that normalizes emotional rest, boundary setting, and therapeutic self-reflection for Black women.
An Osun priestess and host of A Little Juju, she guides spiritual baths and ancestral rituals, nourishing joy and healing through African Traditional Religions.
Next, we have a reproductive justice strategist and health equity researcher. She uplifts rest and joy as essential components of maternal health through writing, advocacy, and modeling restorative practices.
Spiritual life coach and author of African Goddess Initiation and Sacred Bombshell . She creates rituals celebrating self-love, pleasure, and spiritual empowerment for women of color.
Significantly, this mother of four is a birth/postpartum doula who integrates mental wellness, spiritual guidance, nutrition, and intuitive healing for whole-person care.
Last but not least, organizations like Ancient Song Doula Services, Bronx Rebirth, and the Black Coalition for Safe Motherhood integrate rest, dignity, and spiritual joy into prenatal and community care.
SEE ALSO
Softness Is Sacred: Why Juneteenth Is A Reminder For Black Women To Rest was originally published on hellobeautiful.com
Black America Web Featured Video
CLOSE
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Newsweek
5 hours ago
- Newsweek
Black Bear Killed at Yellowstone After Becoming 'Food-Conditioned'
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. An adult female black bear was euthanised by Yellowstone National Park staff after displaying repeated food-conditioned behaviours, according to a park press release. Newsweek contacted Yellowstone National Park for comment via online form on Sunday outside of usual working hours. Why It Matters This marks the first black bear euthanised in Yellowstone for food conditioning since July 2020. In May of this year, an unrelated 11-year-old male grizzly was also euthanised after flipping over multiple bear-resistant dumpsters in high-traffic areas like Old Faithful and Nez Perce Picnic Area, as reported by East Idaho News. What To Know Park officials said the actions took place around 5 p.m. on July 11, at a backcountry campsite in the Blacktail Deer Creek drainage in northern Yellowstone. Officials said that the bear's escalating behavior, including property damage and obtaining a significant food reward, posed a clear threat to visitor safety and warranted removal. The release states that the decision to kill the bear was based on ongoing concern for human safety, property damage to camping equipment, and the bear learning to defeat the park's backcountry food storage poles to obtain human food. A Black bear forages for food near a stream on May 18, 2024 in Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming. A Black bear forages for food near a stream on May 18, 2024 in Yellowstone National Park, bear had previously crushed an unused tent on June 7 and later climbed a properly secured food storage pole to access campers' food bags on July 11. Although incidents involving bears obtaining human food at Yellowstone remain uncommon, when they do occur, the animal may quickly lose its natural wariness of humans. Park authorities warned that such bold behaviour raises serious safety concerns. Yellowstone National Park stretches from Wyoming into Montana, and Idaho and was established as a national park by President Ulysses S. Grant on March 1, 1872. It is the first national park in the United States. The park spans more than 3,468.4 square miles. Yellowstone is home to both grizzly bears and black bears, one of the few places south of Canada where the two species live side by side. What People Are Saying Yellowstone's bear management biologist Kerry Gunther said in the news release: "We go to great lengths to protect bears and prevent them from gaining access to human food in all areas of the park. But occasionally, a bear outsmarts us or overcomes our defenses. When that happens, we sometimes have to make the difficult decision to remove the bear from the population to protect people and property." The park's website states: "Visitors should be aware that all bears are potentially dangerous. Park regulations require that people stay at least 100 yards (91 meters) from bears (unless safely in your car as a bear moves by). "Bears need your concern, not your food; it is against the law to feed any park wildlife, including bears. All of Yellowstone is bear habitat – from the deepest backcountry to the boardwalks around Old Faithful. Prepare for bear encounters no matter where you go by learning more about bear safety." What Happens Next Yellowstone continues to require all backcountry campers to use either food storage poles or bear-resistant food containers at the park's 293 campsites. Officials emphasise that proper food storage, except when actively cooking or eating, is vital for visitor safety and wildlife protection.


Chicago Tribune
7 hours ago
- Chicago Tribune
Snapshot of food insecurity in Illinois and the U.S.
Before July 4, food insecurity was already a growing issue across the United States. Here are some of the reasons why: The legislation expanded work requirements for SNAP recipients in the following categories who were previously exempt: If SNAP recipients in those categories don't find 80 hours of work per month, they will lose their benefits. Nearly 2 million Illinoisans were using SNAP benefits in 2024 — 15.7% of the state for the seventh-highest percentage in the nation, the Illinois Policy Institute reported. SNAP recipients are not the only ones in need of food assistance, though. Mike Havala, president and CEO of the Naperville-based nonprofit Loaves & Fishes Community Services, explained the 'SNAP gap' at a roundtable event in Geneva earlier this month. Here's the idea: Many people in the 'SNAP gap' and on SNAP benefits depend on food pantries to supplement the limited food they can afford. Because of the 'Big, Beautiful Bill,' even more people will need help from nonprofit food banks and pantries.

Epoch Times
a day ago
- Epoch Times
Woman With Disabled Adult Son Finds Her Purpose in Spotlighting the Caregiving Crisis in America
When Jessica was pregnant, she got tough news from her doctor: Her unborn child would either not survive, or have severe special needs. Fortunately her son Lucas did survive, though he faced many physical challenges: level 3 autism, intellectual disability, Chiari malformation, hydrocephalus, scoliosis, low muscle tone, and low vision. He would require round-the-clock care for the rest of his life. Five years later, Jessica was slammed with another challenge: Her husband Jason, age 30, passed away. The Michigan-based widow accepted life as a single mom of four children. At least, until a prayer at her husband's funeral: 'My mother-in-law, Jason's mom, actually pulled me aside at the funeral and said, 'Jess, I just want you to know I'm praying for your next husband.' I thought, I don't think I'm anywhere near even thinking about that, but you know, that would be great someday.'