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Join Aliza Imran and Jessica Shona-Stewart as they discuss recent Sac State news.Imran discusses the announcement last Thursday that winter commencement will be held at the Golden 1 Center on Dec. 14. She also talks about Sac State's increase of Latinx/Chicanx representation, the Southwest Asian and North African (SWANA) Center opening and the Sacramento Reptile Show. Shona-Stewart talks about the financial instability that Sac State students are experiencing from delays in the Free Application for Federal Student Aid, as well as the Asian American Pacific Islander (AAPI) Policy Summit and President Luke Wood's fee increase approval. Show notes:FAFSA delays and changes threaten Sac State's financially vulnerable studentsBREAKING: Sac State President Luke Wood announces 4 of 5 student fee increases approvedSac State hosts the inaugural Asian American Pacific Islander Statewide Policy SummitBREAKING: Sac State to host winter commencement at Golden 1 CenterSacramento Reptile Show delivers an un-frog-gettable fall expositionCHLFSA calls on Sac State to increase Latinx/Chicanx representation and leadership
Listeners, we're back this week with Leslie Priscilla Arreola-Hillenbrand.Leslie Priscilla is a first generation non-Black Xicana with Rarámuri lineage. She is a mother to three bicultural children and a certified Parent Coach with over 14 years of experience. Leslie shares her medicine by offering coaching, workshops, support and advocacy for Latinx/Chicanx families locally, nationally and internationally via Latinx Parenting. Leslie's vision is of a movement rooted in children's rights, social and racial justice, the individual and collective practice of nonviolence and reparenting, intergenerational and ancestral healing, cultural sustenance, and the active decolonization of oppressive practices in our families towards liberation.During this episode we talked about:03:37 - Her heritage and her family's story06:46 - Ho-gramps and the father wound12:26 - Think about how we embodied the system14:29 - “I need my identity in a partner to be felt”16:46 - Re-mothering17:25 - Release expectation and embrace inner mother22:36 - The inner niñas of our mothers26:01 - Tend to my inner niña and it's not my job to tend to my mother wound31:40 - Boundaries with family35:45 - Boundaries with family43:26 - Her book Chancla and the chancla culture44:55 - Chancla culture46:23 - Stereotyping parentsThis episode is brought to you by The PowerSisters MethodFollow Leslie on all things social:WebsiteFacebookInstagramLinkedIn Follow Cafe con Pam on all things socialInstagramFacebookhttp://cafeconpam.com/Join the FREE Cafe con Pam ChallengeJoin our Discord space and let's keep the conversation going! Learn about PowerSisters Subscribe, rate, review, and share this episode with someone you love!And don't ever forget to Stay Shining!
Dr. Moises Santos is the New Latinx/Chicanx Faculty member in the Ethnic Studies department at Santa Rosa Junior College. Dr. Santos shares with us his motivation for becoming a faculty member and why he chose Santa Rosa Junior College. #SRJC #SRJCethnicstudies #Chicanx #latinx #chicanxlatinx #oaxaca #oaxaqueño #Oaxacalifornia --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/rafael-vazquez7/support
In this episode of Your Story Medicine, I welcome Leslie Priscilla, a first generation non-Black Chicana mother to three bicultural children. Leslie shares her medicine by offering coaching, workshops, support, and advocacy for Latinx/Chicanx families locally, nationally, and internationally both in-person and online via the Latinx Parenting organization. She founded this bilingual organization and movement intentionally rooted in children's rights, social and racial justice, the individual and collective practice of nonviolence and reparenting, intergenerational and ancestral healing, cultural sustenance, and the active decolonization of oppressive practices in our families. Main Topics Discussed: Defining “Gentle Parenting”Embodying Decolonized Nonviolent parenting Alternative means to violence intervention with youthThe role that Latinx parents have in changing chancla culture What it means to be raising future ancestors Learn more about Latinx Parenting: Visit their website: www.latinxparenting.org Follow them on Instagram: www.instagram.com/latinxparenting Email me at hello@yourstorymedicine.com or send me a message on Instagram @jumakae. Download my free guided meditation on how to connect with your ancestors bit.ly/ancestorinthemaking Apply to Roots to Rise: www.yourstorymedicine.com/roots2rise
In this week's episode, we invite Isabel Gurrola to the platica as we share our experiences as three first generation Latinx/Chicanx women. We discuss the "hustle culture", imposter syndrome and the strive to be successful for ourselves and our families. We hope you enjoy! By any means, please rate, review, and follow! And follow Isabel Gurrola on insta @untaught.history @isaaabel52
Jennifer Gonzalez joins me for a discussion on looking at and researching Art, being an academic, getting comfortable with terms Latinx/Chicanx , specialization in the Humanities, Complexity and Civil Discourse, Profit and Art, Art vs Making, and what we decide to do and not do.
How do we reparent ourselves, and what does it even mean to begin with? In this week's episode, I speak with Leslie Priscilla, a first generation non-Black Xicana with Rarámuri lineage. She is a mother to three biracial children and a certified Parent Coach with over 13 years of experience. She shares with us her knowledge and insight on reparenting our own inner child so that we can show up and be the parents we've always wanted to be. Listen in as we talk about: The changes she's making to parenting in LatinX culture What reparenting is and why our own healing is important Why reparenting ourselves can feel uncomfortable and disrespectful in relation to how we were raised The importance of self-compassion and tips to visualizing it How to break patterns of anger Leslie shares her medicine by offering coaching, workshops, support and advocacy for Latinx/Chicanx families locally, nationally and internationally via Latinx Parenting. Leslie's vision is of a movement rooted in children's rights, social and racial justice, the individual and collective practice of nonviolence and reparenting, intergenerational and ancestral healing, cultural sustenance, and the active decolonization of oppressive practices in our families towards liberation. Resources mentioned in this episode Free Parenting Reset Challenge Parenting From the Inside Out by Dan Siegel and Mary Hartzell Connect with Leslie On Instagram On Twitter Www.Latinxparenting.org with Sarah Rosensweet On Instagram On Facebook https://www.sarahrosensweet.com
COMMUNITY IS EVERYTHING! Join the Joyful Courage Tribe in our community Facebook groups: Live and Love with Joyful CourageJoyful Courage for Parents of Teens :::: My guest today is Leslie Priscilla. Leslie is a first generation non-Black Chicana mother to three biracial children ages 8, 3, and 2. She is a descendant of Indigenous Tarahumara Rarámuri and Spanish lineages who has resided on occupied Tongva (ton-va) and Acjachemen (hash-i-men) land, also known as Orange County, CA, all of her life. Leslie shares her medicine by offering coaching, workshops, support and advocacy for Latinx/Chicanx families locally, nationally, and internationally both in-person and online via the Latinx Parenting organization. Formerly an early childhood teacher and 1:1 behavioral coach, Leslie has worked with children and families for over 13 years. She has a dual degree in Child Development & Family Studies as well as Family Life Education from CSULB, and attended the Masters in Social Work program at Cal State Fullerton before pausing to focus on her babies and the Latinx Parenting movement. Leslie is trained as a facilitator in various parent education curricula including Trauma-Informed Nonviolent Parenting, Positive Discipline, Supporting Fatherhood Involvement (SFI), Community Parent Education (C.O.P.E) and others. She has facilitated groups in both Spanish and English for hundreds of parents in schools, transitional homes, teen shelters, drug rehabilitation centers, and family resource centers throughout Orange County, CA. Over the years, Leslie has long worked within mental health agencies in positions serving as Interim Director of Parent Education for the Child Abuse Prevention Center in Orange County, Youth & Professional Programs Manager for NAMI Orange County, and as a Consultant for the Dads Matter Program of Children's Bureau. Takeaways from the show: La chancla culture History of oppression showing up in parenting Treating children with the same respect as adults How conditioning shows up in parenting Parenting for the long term Awareness in your relationship with your children Decolonization Patriarchal value in latinx culture Dealing with negative opinions on Instagram Respect is valuable You cannot parent your children without reparenting yourself Where to find Leslie: Instagram | Website | FaceBook | Twitter Resources: Spare the kids book | Support Scholarship Funds What does Joyful Courage mean to you? Joyful Courage to me means very much what Brenne Brown would talk about when it comes to being brave, showing up as yourself and finding joy in the experience of living. Really living and receiving all the beauty and experiencing all the joy. Sometimes we forget to enjoy our kids because we focus so much on parenting them and all the tools. I think Joyful Courage is really allowing ourselves to experience it as a whole. See you next week!! :) :::: JULY MEMBERSHIP Hi friends - are you loving this show? Intrigued by the topic that is being teased apart? Hungry to dive deeper into discussions like this and others?? I am so excited to let you know that JULY enrollment is open for the Living Joyful Courage Membership program. Each quarter members get: A 30 minute one on one call with me Twice monthly group calls A private book club A content rich webinar A virtual retreat Ongoing support and connection in out community space PLUS access to all past teen summits during your time in the membership…. This is a group for moms of tweens and teens. Moms who are looking for that extra layer of growing and learning around showing up through the twists and turns of adolescence. It's a messy time. Maybe you have raised your kids with PD and are finding that you are unsure what this looks like during middle and high school? Maybe you are just coming into the positive parenting conversation, and need support for shifting into a more connected, less controlling role with your growing child. Or maybe you are looking for a community of like-minded mamas that are passionate about staying in the motherhood conversation. We've got you. Here's what some of the mamas are saying: “It is great to know that I have a place to go when I'm really struggling with parenting. I feel more hope having this group.” “I don't feel as alone, it's so nice to communicate with so many Mom's who have an idea of what I'm experiencing. I've never felt supported in my parenting journey before and you help me feel supported, thank you Casey! I love the community space. It's so helpful to be able to reach out for support when I'm experiencing a parenting challenge and to be able to support other Moms who need support too.” The membership doors will be open through the month of July!! Go to joyfulcourage.com/ljc to get signed up. :::: The Book, The Coaching Joyful Courage is so much more than a podcast! I know that you love listening in every week AND I want to encourage you to dig deeper into the learning with me, INVEST in your parenting journey. READ THE BOOK - Joyful Courage, Calming the Drama and Taking Control of Your Parenting Journey is all about how to show up as a Joyful Courage parent so that you have better access to the tools you need in hot parenting moments – tools that are helpful and maintain connection with your child. Available both in book and audio book form → http://www.joyfulcourage.com/book CONSIDER ONE ON ONE COACHING - The most POWERFUL of investments offered by Joyful Courage, one on one coaching allows for parents to really tease apart the current issues they are having with their child, while also developing a clear compass for guiding them in the direction they want to be going in. Coaching happens every other week, and is open for parents with kids 4 years old through the teen years. Go to my coaching page to book a free exploratory call and see if we are the right fit. → http://www.joyfulcourage.com/jccoaching ::::: Be a Subscriber Make sure to SUBSCRIBE to the Joyful Courage Podcast on Apple Podcast to get the latest shows STRAIGHT to your device!! AND PLEASE rate and review the Joyful Courage Parenting Podcast to help me spread the show to an ever-larger audience!! CLICK HERE to watch a video that shows up how to subscribe with your iPhone!
In this episode, Danellia speaks with her comadre Leslie Priscilla from @latinxparenting. Leslie Priscilla Arreola-Hillenbrand is a first generation non-Black Xicana with Rarámuri lineage. She is a mother to three biracial children and a certified Parent Coach with over 13 years of experience. Leslie shares her medicine by offering coaching, workshops, support and advocacy for Latinx/Chicanx families locally, nationally and internationally via Latinx Parenting. Leslie's vision is of a movement rooted in children's rights, social and racial justice, the individual and collective practice of nonviolence and reparenting, intergenerational and ancestral healing, cultural sustenance, and the active decolonization of oppressive practices in our families towards liberation. Danellia and Leslie talk about how crisis schooling (coined by Akilah S. Richards of Fare of the Free Child) is forcing many parents to reevaluate their parenting and their education choices for their children. They discuss how they, themselves have been extremely triggered by their own children during the pandemic more than ever before and how to work through those triggers. Learn more about Leslie's work with Latinx Parenting at www.latinxparenting.org Enjoying this podcast and want to support it's production? Buy me a coffee! www.buymeacoffee.com/danellia To find the friend's mentioned in this podcast click below: Karissa M Raya Marlha Sanchez Crystal Domi Selisa Loeza
In this interview from July 2020, Joseph Orosco talks about how Black and Latinx/Chicanx movements of the past intersect in the wake of the murder of George Floyd. We talk about state and police violence against Mexican-American communities, the unity between César Chávez and Martin Luther King Jr., and points of solidarity between Black and Latinx movements. GuestJoseph Orosco, professor of philosophy at Oregon State University
In today's episode we chat with a parent coach regarding reparenting ourselves so we can be better parents for our children. This takes us reflecting on the messages we received as children and how we either continue to pass those messages along or break the cycle. We talk about how children act in ways to get their needs met and often what triggers us are opportunities for healing. It begins with us, reflecting and learning to soothe so we can pass these skills to our children. We can learn so much from our children but we need to take the time to reflect and remain attuned to ourselves and our kids. It is not about blaming or shaming our parents but acknowledging that we all have childhood wounds that may require us to reparent ourselves so that we can break the cycle. Leslie Priscilla also touches on her mission to end chancla culture buy educating parents so that we do not continue to oppress and exert control over our children. Leslie Priscilla Arreola-Hillenbrand is a first generation non-Black Xicana with Rarámuri lineage. She is a mother to three biracial children and a certified Parent Coach with over 13 years of experience. Leslie shares her medicine by offering coaching, workshops, support and advocacy for Latinx/Chicanx families locally, nationally and internationally via Latinx Parenting. Leslie's vision is of a movement rooted in children's rights, social and racial justice, the individual and collective practice of nonviolence and reparenting, intergenerational and ancestral healing, cultural sustenance, and the active decolonization of oppressive practices in our families towards liberation. For more information leslie@latinxparenting.org and @Latinxparenting on Instagram and Facebook. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/elisesanchez6/support
Jesus Juarez Castro is an undocumented immigrant to the U.S. and shares the reason why he migrated and what motivates him to succeed. A Latinx/Chicanx major with goals of becoming a professor, Jesus decided to start his own podcast "Down for the Brown" as a way to empower people of color and educate them about their own identities. Check out his podcast on Spotify, iTunes, Google Play and Achor. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/rafael-vazquez7/support
Gentle Parents Unite Podcast S04E09 - Interview with Leslie Arreola-Hillenbrand In this interview we go deep into the connection between anti-oppression work and conscious parenting. Leslie brings her wealth of experience and wisdom to the conversation. Leslie, Sujai and Vivek are all parent educators and social-jutice activists so this discussion was facinating to engage in. Leslie Arreola-Hillenbrand is a first generation non-Black Chicana mother to three biracial children ages 8, 2, and 1. She founded the Latinx Parenting organization and movement intententionally rooted in children's rights, social and racial justice, the individual and collective practice of nonviolence and reparenting, intergenerational and ancestral healing, cultural sustenance, and the active decolonization of oppressive practices in our families. Leslie shares her medicine by offering coaching, workshops, support and advocacy for Latinx/Chicanx families locally, nationally, and internationally both in-person and online via the Latinx Parenting organization. You can find Leslie at https://www.latinxparenting.org/ https://www.facebook.com/latinxparenting https://www.instagram.com/latinxparenting/ ------------------------ Join us on our Patreon https://www.patreon.com/GentleParentsUnite Our Facebook group https://www.facebook.com/groups/gentleparentsunite/ Vivek's articles and videos can be found on his personal social media http://www.meaningfulideas.com http://www.facebook.com/meaningfulideas http://www.instagram.com/meaningfulideas https://www.youtube.com/meaningfulideas Note: the theme music is called “Joyful” by Marji Zintz: www.marjizintz.us --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/gpubecominggentle/message
Laura met with some of the actors and directors at the SeriesFest GLBT Event. Ser Anzoategui is a non-binary Latinx/Chicanx actor/playwright/artist who plays the role of Eddy and some reviews call them “the break out star” in the Starz network drama series, 'Vida." The show is a drama series about two Mexican-American siblings from East Los Angeles. Kit Williamson is a director and actor in EastSiders, an American dark comedy web series that follows couple Cal (Williamson) and Thom (Van Hansis) as they struggle with infidelity and substance abuse.Instagram/Twitter: @kitwilliamson @eastsiderstvGLBTQ Project Patreon: www.patreon.com/kitwilliamsonTo find out more about Laura and her work please visit her website at www.laurapowers.net. You can also find Laura on Twitter @thatlaurapowers, on Facebook @thatlaurapowers, and on Instagram at laurapowers44.
Laura met with some of the actors and directors at the SeriesFest GLBT Event. Ser Anzoategui is a non-binary Latinx/Chicanx actor/playwright/artist who plays the role of Eddy and some reviews call them “the break out star” in the Starz network drama series, 'Vida." The show is a drama series about two Mexican-American siblings from East Los Angeles. Kit Williamson is a director and actor in EastSiders, an American dark comedy web series that follows couple Cal (Williamson) and Thom (Van Hansis) as they struggle with infidelity and substance abuse.Instagram/Twitter: @kitwilliamson @eastsiderstvGLBTQ Project Patreon: www.patreon.com/kitwilliamsonTo find out more about Laura and her work please visit her website at www.laurapowers.net. You can also find Laura on Twitter @thatlaurapowers, on Facebook @thatlaurapowers, and on Instagram at laurapowers44.
The “On the Inside Looking In” podcast is in Denver, CO with poet, award-winning writer, performer, and cultural worker Bobby LeFebre. His play, Northside, turned YouTube series turned back into a play is a narrative that focuses on the mergence of affluent migration into established neighborhoods and it’s effects on the people from all sides. We talk the sold out 23-show run at the Su Teatro Cultural and Performing Arts Center, the destruction of culture and legacy due to gentrification, and the modern Millennial Chicanx duality between money and gente. We also go into the necessity of homegrown artistic platforms for Latinx/Chicanx representation, the multitude of paths for the voicing of sociological displeasures, and more. Bobby LeFebre Instagram: @bobbylefebre https://www.bobbylefebre.com/ Su Teatro Cultural and Performing Arts Center Instagram: @su_teatro http://suteatro.org/ Northside Instagram: @northsidetheplay https://suteatro.wellattended.com/events/northside "Welcome to the Northside" - youtube series Instagram: @Welcometothenorthside https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCanyLJHlwzuS0qnmtMilsmQ Los Mocochetes - Que Viva Revolucion! Instagram: @losmocochets http://losmocochetes.com/ https://soundcloud.com/losmocochetes This is a Calibexar production. Instagram: @calibexar Twitter: @Calibexar Facebook: Calibexar
Learn more about my Teaching Through a Culturally Diverse Lens Course About Michael Domínguez, Ph.D. Dr. Michael Domínguez is an Assistant Professor of Youth and Educational Studies in the Chicana/o Studies Department at San Diego State University. Previously a middle school teacher in North Las Vegas, NV, Dr. Domínguez’ research focuses on liberatory teacher education, the schooling experiences and literacies of Latinx/Chicanx youth, and the intersections of critical pedagogy, decolonial theory, and learning science. His current projects include program design to cultivate decolonizing dispositions and pedagogies among pre-service and practicing educators and developing collaborative school-community partnerships to support culturally sustaining growth and socio-political development for Latinx and historically marginalized youth, their families, and their teachers. Show Highlights Decolonial Teacher Education Essential 1: Find literature written by a decolonial scholar Essential 2: Spending time with students outside of school settings Essential 3: Build curriculum around authentic transdisciplinary problems Essential 4: Check your language practices Essential 5: Know and love your students for who they are Connect with Michael michael.domínguez@sdsu.edu Additional Resources Culturally Sustaining Pedagogies: Teaching and Learning for Justice in a Changing World A Search Past Silence: The Literacy of Young Black Men Sueños Americanos: Barrio Youth Negotiating Social and Cultural Identities Borderlands/La Frontera: The New Mestiza Coloniality of the US/Mexico Border: Power, Violence, and the Decolonial Imperative Connect with me on Twitter @sheldoneakins www.leadingequitycenter.com
360Karma’s Live Live Thrive Show guest this week is Ser Anzoategui. Ser is a non-binary Latinx/Chicanx actor/playwright/activist with the gender pronoun “They/Them/Theirs,” who plays the role of Eddie in the Starz network drama series “Vida." Vida is a drama-filled story of family, love, and identity. Ser is up and coming in the industry, but perhaps even more importantly, they are playing a significant role in empowering and advocating for the local community as well as educating the larger society through entertainment.
In this practice, you’ll experience a daily gratitude prayer with Francisca Porchas Coronado in English. It can be listened to from a quiet and still place, or on the go - wherever you can dedicate your heart and attention. You can find a version of this prayer along with other practices in the Resistencia Ancestral / Ancestral Spiritual Resistance Zine you can download for free from Mijente: https://mijente.net/2017/11/02/ancestral-spiritual-resistance-zine/ * Se puede escuchar este rezo en español por el próximo episodio / Download the next episode to hear this prayer in Spanish * You can also download the corresponding conversation with Francisca (episode 21). We talk about: her spiritual path in IFA, how she was politicized and got her start in organizing, healing traditions in immigrant Latinx & Chicanx communities, the resilience of undocumented folks in the face of loss and grief, tending to pain politically and personally, community ritual, bridging healing and organizing and some specific challenging asks for organizers and healers to help build that bridge. -- ABOUT OUR GUEST: FRANCISCA PORCHAS CORONADO Francisca Porchas Coronado is a Mexican immigrant, Chicana, Latinx, feminist, and anti-racist organizer with over 15 years of organizing experience. As former Organizing Director of Puente Human Rights Movement in Phoenix, she has been one of the leading voices against deportations and immigrant detention in the country. As a 2017 Nathan Cummings Foundation Fellow, Francisca founded Healing In Resistance, a wellness project centering the spiritual and emotional wellbeing of immigrant communities in the fight against criminalization. She has been initiated into the ancient, indigenous Yoruba tradition of IFA for over a decade and is currently a priestess in training. -- JOIN THE COMMUNITY: Sign up for the email list at www.healingjustice.org Social media: Instagram @healingjustice, Healing Justice Podcast on Facebook, & @hjpodcast on Twitter This podcast is 100% volunteer-run. Help cover our costs by becoming a sponsor at www.patreon.com/healingjustice Please leave us a positive rating & review in whatever podcast app you’re listening - it all helps! THANK YOU: Mixed and produced by Zach Meyer at the COALROOMIntro and Closing music gifted by Danny O’BrienAll visuals contributed by Josiah Werning