From tackling cultural stigmatization to entering into the facility of generational therapeutic, the Boris Lawrence Henson Basis (BLHF)’s fifth annual “Can We Speak? Arts and Wellness Summit” (Oct. 10-12) provided a packed itinerary guided to form psychological wellness in Black communities.
With interactive activations and celebratory occasions at Nationwide Harbor in Oxon Hill, Maryland, the yearly custom was delivered to life by actress and BLHF founder Taraji P. Henson, and featured: a day by day enterprise exhibit corridor, the “i AM the Desk” Profit Brunch, and a name for transgenerational transformation.
“There are therapeutic ways in which sharing with individuals in your group solely strengthens, and it diminishes the generational curses that…permits us to develop out of them, transfer previous them, and develop a option to heal a lot extra than simply ourselves,” stated entrepreneurial healer Leah Cole (LMDesigns8), a vendor within the exhibit corridor on Oct. 11. “[The Can We Talk Summit] causes huge waves of therapeutic and options that might be echoed perpetually. It begins right here, and it grows from there.”
Kicking off on World Psychological Well being Day, well being specialists and advocates, native officers, and celebrities from throughout the nation gathered on the crossroads of dialog and cultural competence to handle stigmas of psychological well being consciousness, whereas channeling innovation and transparency to forge paths to wellness.
All through the weekend, activations centered on highly effective discussions and refined approaches to suicide, melancholy, grief, social gender norms, and different obstacles to Black pleasure, with a pulse on the connection of ancestral therapeutic birthed in practices reminiscent of African drumming, storytelling, stepping, and hip-hop remedy, to call a couple of.
In the meantime, visitor appearances and champions of change provided a toolkit to champion resilience that begins with difficult systemic oppression, from individuals reminiscent of: BLHF management, together with Henson and government director Tracie Jade; Prince George’s County Govt Aisha Braveboy and County Council Chair Edward Burroughs III; actors Lisa Vidal and Tristian “Mack” Wilds; TV speak present host Sherri Shepherd; and rapper Megan thee Stallion.
“I’d like to see [mental health care be] reasonably priced…and that we discuss it extra brazenly,” Henson informed The Informer. “[When] I begin to see Black males coping with their trauma, as a substitute of making an attempt to be robust on a regular basis, and girls coping with our traumas, I feel it can unite us as a group.”
Prince George’s County ‘Steps Into Therapeutic’ with Renovations, Rhythm of Launch
On the ultimate day of the convention, in partnership with BLHF, Braveboy and Burroughs introduced a brand new growth coming to District 8 within the type of a $30 million Therapeutic Arts Integrative Wellness Hub, set to reimagine the Temple Hills Neighborhood Middle in Prince George’s County.
The modern undertaking – happening within the county the place childhood associates Henson and Jade grew up – will function modern programming aimed toward furthering the mission of the summit, putting points reminiscent of suicide, trauma, and social isolation by means of artistic arts, wellness practices, and evidence-based well being companies, “all in a culturally accountable surroundings,” stated Burroughs.
“The difficulty of psychological well being has actually impacted our county in some actually unhappy methods,” Braveboy informed The Informer forward of the large announcement on Oct. 12. “What we wish is to stop tragedies. Once you’re affected by psychological well being points, oftentimes you are feeling trapped–we wish individuals to dwell.”
Whereas the county government deemed the summit a vital initiative that may finally “save lives,” Alexia Pitter, a scientific psychological well being pupil at John Hopkins College, was among the many activation leaders striving to provide others with a lifeline of help, significantly by means of the artwork of stepping.

Pitter, a six-time survivor of sexual abuse, used the summit to uplift the values of cultural practices that may function a beacon for the present struggles in Black communities. She touted the power to launch, “discover your voice once more,” and construct a more healthy relationship between the thoughts, physique and soul as a few of the benefits to “entering into your therapeutic.”
“Stepping was [my] means of survival, just like our ancestors and people within the gold mines in South Africa, and it nonetheless is true right this moment,” stated the Howard College alumni, nodding to the evolution of step evident by means of Black Greek tradition. “We create our personal rhythm with stepping…and it goes again to releasing and simply being autonomous of your individual therapeutic journey. It’s one thing [ancestral] that we will hold.”
Pitter additional pressured the worth of making a secure house inside the physique as a way to pour into oneself.
She reminded all Black practitioners and healers to prioritize their very own well-being, including: “We will’t heal anybody till we heal ourselves.”
The convention underscored the significance of centering pleasure, connecting with religion and household, and using native psychological well being sources. Additional, the psychological well being advocates inspired studying to remove social media pressures, saying no to others, and discovering restorative retailers of reduction – whether or not it’s going to the fitness center, watching a film, socializing, or just taking a second to breathe in chaos.
Cole and Pitter recommended the multicultural arts and wellness summit for laying the groundwork for collective therapeutic that may transcend generations of progress – noting it solely takes one speak at a time.
“We’re beings going by means of quite a lot of issues, and whenever you discover like-minded individuals…our therapeutic journeys can mirror one another, will help one another, can help each other…and you find yourself in locations like this,” Cole informed The Informer. “With out having the exhausting discussions, all we’re is the issues. Let’s be options to these issues.”





















