Monthly Archives: January 2022

Why Is Everyone Smoking Toad Venom? – What To Know About the Hallucinogenic Toad, DMT, Bufo – TownandCountrymag.com

Posted: January 24, 2022 at 10:13 am

In Southampton, soccer moms drop their kids off at school after taking their thrice-weekly microdose of psilocybin mushrooms, then meet for oat milk lattes. In Sun Valley, private retreats dedicated to tripping on MDMA or the Amazonian elixir ayahuasca are becoming almost as common as backyard barbecues. (Just dont bring the kids.) In Silicon Valley, tech entrepreneurs and financiers turned psychonauts believe that taking small doses of LSD, in either liquid or tab form, helps with creativity and productivity in the workforce. Even rightwing internet investor Peter Thiel has put a formidable stake in Compass Pathways, a publicly traded psychedelic medicine company.

But now theres a weirder, wilder new drug appearing on the menu for moneyed types in search of mind expansion: the Toad, otherwise known as 5-MeO-DMT (or, if you really want to know its correct name, 5-methoxy-N, N-dimethyltryptamine), or DMT, or Bufo. In his landmark 2018 memoir, How to Change Your Mind, Michael Pollan referred to it as the Everest of psychedelics.

Bufo is one of the most potent psychotropic drugs ever discovered.

Tamer El-Shakhs, an owner of the chic Malibu dispensary 99 High Tide and a sommelier, if you will, of all things hallucinogenic, told me that just as Everest is a mountain you would climb only a few times in your life, Bufo is a drug you would not want to take more than a few times. It is so intense, and the experience so total and so life-changing, that I dont think you would want to do itor need to do itmore than a couple of times, he says. Yet none of that has stopped a number of celebrities from openly talking about their experiences, from Mike Tyson to Chelsea Handler to reality TV star Christina Haack, who wrote about her Bufo experience in an Instagram post last July. I had taken time off social, hired a spiritual coach, and smoked a Bufo toad (which basically reset my brain and kicked out years of anxiety in 15 mins), she wrote. Hunter Biden has described it as a salve in helping him kick drug addiction.

What exactly are these people smoking? Bufo is the venom of the Sonoran desert toad, Bufo alvarius, which contains the molecule 5-MeO-DMT, one of the most potent psychotropic drugs ever discovered. Until recently it was so obscure the U.S. government did not list it as a controlled substance until 2011. For nine months of the year the Sonoran desert toad lives under the sands of the Mexican desert to survive the scorching heat, but when the winter rains arrive, it emerges for a Caligula-like orgy of eating and fornicating. Glands on the sides of its neck and legs emit a venom so toxic it can cause death in a predator within seconds. Bufo hunters catch the toads at night using flashlightsthe toads freeze when confronted by a bright lightthen milk the venom from the toads parotid glands, typically holding a mirror up to catch the spray. Overnight, the milky venom dries on the glass, turning into flaky crystals, leaving behind only the 5-MeO-DMT and none of the lethal toxin. (The toads are allegedly unharmed.)

Brad Wilson, DVMGetty Images

The crystals (typically a dose is 50 mg) are smoked in a glass pipe; participants are asked to inhale slowly for eight seconds and hold in the vapor for at least several seconds more. And then they enter a consciousness rocket ship ride. The effects are immediate and intense.

Most people who try Bufo describe a feeling of oceanic boundlessness, of oneness with the universe. They describe a high level of ego dissolution. Some describe a fusion with God, a visceral connection with the divine source of all life, and a sense of connection with all beings. From my one experience taking ecstasy, or MDMA, that all sounds par for the course for hallucinogenic drugs. (The next day I remember thinking, I felt one with the universe with that person? Sheesh.)

Some describe a fusion with God, a visceral connection with the divine source of all life.

With Bufo, however, most users experience such a dissolution of the self and ego that they feel they are dead, or dying, that they exist in a blank space, and they slowly reemerge, to be born again, flushed of all their perceived flaws and addictions and no longer able to feel pain from past trauma. In Pollans book he says, I felt an inexplicable urge to lift my knees, and as soon as I raised them, I felt something squeeze out from between my legs, but easily and without struggle or pain.

On a Joe Rogan podcast in 2019, Mike Tyson spoke about how Bufo had completely changed his life. Its almost like dying and being reborn Its almost like youre dying, youre submissive, youre humble, youre vulnerablebut youre invincible still in all. And in late 2021 Tyson told the New York Post that in my trips, Ive seen that death is beautiful.

Hunter Biden has described it as a salve in helping him kick drug addiction.

This might, in part, explain Bufos surprising ascent to trip du jour among a certain social set. For those who trade in power, it might be the one thing that can help them see past their own egos, if only temporarily. Maybe it feels especially good for those who are expected to meet high standards of success and image, allowing them to let go of some of the demand for effortless, excessive perfection. Also, its expensive, rare, hot fodder for dinner party conversationsand its also less of a commitment than some other trendy trips. Unlike an ayahuasca ceremony, during which you might spend hours hallucinating and vomiting and days recovering, the Bufo trip is intense but fast. Typically, participants in a Bufo ceremony are clearheaded within an hour. Many of the companies that lead tours outside the United States for the Bufo ceremony, such as Behold Retreats, limit groups to five people, with three facilitators.

For those who trade in power, it might be the one thing that can help them see past their own egos.

Bufo is of course just part of a larger psychedelic wave washing over the United States. Microdosing psilocybin is being promoted as a method for healing trauma and treating depression and addiction, and theres a recognition that Silicon Valley is placing big financial bets on psychedelic drugs, which lends the movement credibility. Whereas psychedelics were once the symbol of a radical generational counterculture led by Timothy Leary and Jim Morrison, these drugs (LSD, psilocybin, ibogaine, MDMA) are now practically a mainstay among the class of people who 40 years ago would have clutched their pearls and invoked Nancy Reagan, Richard Nixon, and Carrie Nation. Today Americas intelligentsia is in the grip of a hallucinogenic fever dream, where its normal to walk into a house in the Hamptons or Malibu and have the hostess, pearls swinging around her neck (perhaps the same ones her mother was wearing 40 years ago) offer you something that half a decade ago you never would have thought of ingesting. After all, recreational marijuana is legal in 18 states plus the District of Columbia.

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The shift came in 2018, when Pollan published How to Change Your Mind: What the New Science of Psychedelics Teaches Us About Consciousness, Dying, Addiction, Depression, and Transcendence. Here was a guy I had met a few times in the New York Times newsroom (I was a reporter there); he would occasionally come in to see the food editors, a shambling, middle-aged intellectual white guy from Long Island who had taught at Harvard and Berkeley, who wrote mostly about food and the value of vegetarianism. And now, instead of admonishing us to eat food, not too much, mostly plants, he had written a book and he was preaching a new gospel: Try psychedelic drugs. I did. And now I think maybe we all should.

In Los Angeles on a sunny December weekend, El-Shakhs, the marijuana entrepreneur, told me that dozens, if not hundreds, of ceremonies featuring ayahuasca, psilocybin, ibogaine, MDMA, and Bufo take place in Southern California every weekend. He introduced me to a friend of his, a hallucinogenic facilitator (who asked not to be named, since use of Bufo is illegal in the U.S.); she told me that she will conduct Bufo ceremonies for people coming out of trauma. Another facilitator told me she prefers a synthetic, lab-made version of Bufo, mostly because its vegan. (Remember, this was in L.A., where kosher LSD is also a thing. Id really like to find the rabbi who blesses the LSD.)

Today Americas intelligentsia is in the grip of a hallucinogenic fever dream.

Dr. Lea Lis, a New York psychiatrist, told me psilocybin, MDMA, and ketamine are now available in more medicinal, controllable formats, and that is the appeal. Were not seeing the 1960s paradigm, with people overdosing on acid. The old trope was a hippie freaked out on too much acid who jumped off a roof. Now were seeing clinical studies and careful doses, and that gives people a sense of greater safety. (Coincidentally, we spoke on the phone while she was at a convention for MAPS, the Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies, a nonprofit organization that promotes awareness and acceptance of the use of psychedelics and marijuana in place of or along with more traditional psychotherapeutic treatments.)

A healer in California who has worked with what he describes as American royalty, and some of whose clients I know personally, told me Bufo is perhaps the most ideal form of hallucinogen. Ayahuasca, thats like McDonalds or Burger King by now, he says, adding that the original shamans from Peru have been overtaken by North American Instagram healers and former reality TV stars. You know, some guy with a white feather and 15,000 followers.

How to Change Your Mind: What the New Science of Psychedelics Teaches Us About Consciousness, Dying, Addiction, Depression, and Transcendence

Penguin Pressamazon.com

In 2019, Johns Hopkins scientists published a paper titled Fast-Acting Psychedelic Associated with Improvements in Depression/Anxiety, in which they described a lessening of anxiety and depression when Bufo was given in a ceremonial group setting. Approximately 80 percent of the participants reported improvements in anxiety and depression after a Bufo session. These improvements were related to more intense acute mystical effects during the 5-MeO-DMT experience, as well as increases in rating of the personal meaning and spiritual significance of the experience. Improvements were also related to stronger beliefs that the experience contributed to enduring well-being and life satisfaction.

I spoke to a close friend about her experience with Bufo. Because she comes from a well-known and wealthy family, she spoke on condition of anonymity. She had severe childhood trauma beyond what most of us experience and has spent several years dealing with personal health issues. I finally decided talk therapy wasnt enough, she told me. She invited a facilitator to New York, and for a week he prepared her for the ceremony by having her take a mild hallucinogen twice before her DMT trip and learn breathing techniques to keep herself calm during the experience. And by setting her intentions.

He spent a lot of time with me before I did it, she said. He connected with me and grounded me, and I felt like he prepared me well for the experience. This is not something you would want to do with someone who is unfamiliar with the drug.

" It was like doing 30 years of therapy in two weeks."

Within seconds of inhaling the Bufo, all of a sudden I was seeing prisms and geometric shapes, and I felt like I was passing out, but not in a bad way. I started to drift into something; a different world was opening up.

Often, if users have experienced past trauma, they may start crying and screaming. I suddenly felt this massive amount of rage come out of me, she said, and I came out punching and I wanted to attack him and punch him, and he said go ahead, let it out. She did punch him. For a couple of weeks afterward, the ocean shimmered a little more brightly and the plants and flowers in her garden seemed to bloom more beautifully. What it did was essentially open up a huge emotional vortex in me that allowed all of this rage and sorrow to pass through my body and out of my life forever. It was like doing 30 years of therapy in two weeks.

She kept going to see the psychiatrist who had been treating her for depression for a year and a half after the experience. He said, Wow, youre doing amazingly. You do not have depression. It was a huge energetic shift.

To be clear, this is not a party drug, as the hallucinogenic facilitator in Los Angeles told me. This is an experience that requires preparation and trust and intention. But you dont always know what the Bufo will bring out in you. You dont want to write a script before you get to the play. Without proper preparation, things can go terribly wrong, as they did in 2020, when a Spanish porno actor was charged with the murder of a fashion photographer during an ill-conceived Bufo ceremony. Even Pollan writes in his book that his own experience was just horrible.

When I spoke with an intake specialist for Behold Retreats, a company that organizes various hallucinogenic retreats around the world, he asked me a number of questions about my health, especially my mental and cardiac health. (Because, frankly, I am now curious about trying Bufo. Ive had my share of trauma over the past few years, and to have them sandblasted out of my system, Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mindstyle, seems irresistible.)

This is not a drug youd use at a house party, like, Hey, let me lose my ego here! one facilitator said. This is more about assuming you can ride a roller coaster and not die of fear but give in to the freedom. Then get off safely.

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Why Is Everyone Smoking Toad Venom? - What To Know About the Hallucinogenic Toad, DMT, Bufo - TownandCountrymag.com

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Breaking Down Numinus Wellness Quarterly Results – The Dales Report

Posted: at 10:13 am

Numinus Wellness has released its latest quarterly results for the three-month period ending on November 30 of 21. The financials within the report are in Canadian dollars as the company is based in Canada and trades on the TSX under the symbol of NUMI. Numinus Wellness is also available to psychedelics investors in the United States through the over-the-counter (OTC) market under the symbol of NUMIF.

Numinus Wellness ended the latest financial quarter with just under $54 million in cash. The companys revenues spiked 245% on a year over year basis, hitting $0.8 million for the period. Numinus earned a gross profit of just under $50,100 during the financial quarter, equating to a 6.5% gross margin. These financial figures indicate Numinus has strategically positioned itself to provide psychedelic-assisted psychotherapy to those in need throughout Canada via the countrys recently expanded Special Access Program.

Numinus revenue soared an incredible 244.5% on a year over year basis, hitting $0.8 million in the initial quarter of 21, largely as a result of the acquisition of fellow psychedelics specialist Mindspace. The companys sequential revenue jumped nearly 61% in this period of time compared to the fourth quarter of 21. It is also interesting to note Numinus growth profit was $38,135 in the first quarter of 21 and $50,965 in the initial quarter of 22.

The companys growth margin was 6.5% for the initial quarter as compared to -16.6% in the initial quarter of 21. The company lost $1.9 million in the first quarter of 21 and $5.4 million in the initial quarter of 22.

Numinus Q1 22 revenue of $141,702 represents a 27.7% decrease from Q1 of 21 and a 56.4% increase from Q4 of 21. These mixed results are primarily the result of the company putting a halt to its cannabis-related business operations in 21, choosing to redirect efforts toward bolstering its psychedelic treatment modalities. Indeed, Numinus succeeded in creating proprietary psychedelic drug tests with new potency scans and toxicity scans in the winter of 21. Such analytical tests will hasten the companys research and development, setting the stage for the generation of that many more revenue streams via product testing.

Numinus submitted a clinical trial application to Health Canada to start the initial study of its proprietary psilocybe extract. The MDMA therapy trial sponsored by MAPS is likely to help patients struggling with post-traumatic stress disorder, also known as PTSD. The company recently received approval from the Institutional Review Board and Health Canada for the study.

Payton Nyquvest, the Chief Executive Officer and founder of Numinus has stated the company has made significant progress in every aspect of its business in the prior financial quarter. He pointed to exciting opportunities for expansion that loom on the horizon. Nyquvest also highlighted the companys partnership with its clinical and lab teams serving as a catalyst that propelled Numinus past its milestones pertaining to two important clinical trials. One of those trials pertains to the MDMA therapy study sponsored by MAPS. The other trial is centered on the use of a proprietary psilocybe treatment modality.

The announcement of the quarterly results also provided Nyquvest with the opportunity to expound on discoveries made within Numinus Bioscience lab. The company recently commenced genetic testing on multiple recently acquired psychedelic mushrooms. These mushrooms are distinct from the others used by the Numinus as they are new species.

Nyquvest also took the opportunity to state Health Canadas amendments to the Special Access Programme reinforce the growth prospects and importance of the companys wellness clinic network. The hope is the network will continue to expand to provide individuals in need with psychedelic treatment modalities. The companys acquisition of the Health Canada distribution license empowers it to produce, possess, import and distribute a litany of psychedelic compounds.

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Ancient Latin American Empire Could Have Thrived Thanks to Psychedelic-Infused Beer – StreetInsider.com

Posted: at 10:12 am

News and research before you hear about it on CNBC and others. Claim your 1-week free trial to StreetInsider Premium here.

A new study has found that the leaders of Wari may havelaced their beerwith hallucinogens to keep their political control for centuries. The drugs are said to have been extracted from plant seeds. The Wari are a South American civilization that ruled the highlands of what is now known as Peru, before the Incas. The culture occupied the highlands between 600 AD and 1000 AD.

Archaeological excavations that were conducted between 2013 and 2017 at the Quilcapampa site in the south of Peru have discovered that the tribe used seeds derived from the vilca tree then

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Manfred Thierry Mugler 1948 – 2022 – i-D

Posted: at 10:11 am

This morning, the fashion industry woke up to the news of the loss of another titan: Manfred Thierry Mugler. Announced via a post on the legendary French designers personal Instagram account, Thierry passed away on Sunday of natural causes, The Guardian reports, triggering an outpouring of tributes from some of the most prominent voices in fashion and entertainment.

First coming to prominence in the mid-1970s, the designer played a formative role in shaping the exaggerated, architectural style that came to be known as power dressing bold-shouldered, wasp-waisted tailoring that cut imposing, dramatic silhouettes. Through the late 80s and 90s, he then went on to create some of the most enrapturing, otherworldly and outlandishly camp fashion confections the world has ever seen. Fittingly, his work was often presented in marathon spectacles that were more like acts of classical theatre than the 10-minute fashion week sprints were more used to today.

He became one of the most in-demand designers for stage-friendly style throughout his career. David Bowie famously catalysed the rising of the designers star when he wore a Mugler dress for his 1979 Saturday Night Live performance. The designer was behind some of the most significant fashion and pop culture crossover moments in history: the looks worn by Linda, Christy, Naomi and co. in George Michaels Too Funky video; the seminal campaigns for his best-selling perfume, Angel, starring Jerry Hall; and the custom looks hes created for some of todays most emblematic celebrities perhaps most memorable of all being the wet-look dress he designed for Kim Kardashian West for the 2019 Met Gala.

For all the sparkle, fantasy and theatricality of the world that Manfred Thierry Mugler built, a profound sense of humanity remained at the core. Throughout his lifetime, the designer was one of the most staunch advocates of the LGBTQ community, casting trans models like Connie Fleming and Teri Toye on his runway in the 90s; and in 1992 presenting the very first Life Ball, now one of the worlds biggest charity events supporting people living with HIV and AIDS.

Though his passing certainly marks a huge loss for the world, his legacy is an indelible one. As Casey Cadwallader, the current creative director of the house Manfred Thierry Mugler founded, wrote in an Instagram post, he changed our perception of beauty, of confidence, of representation, of self-empowerment, laying the foundation for fashion culture as we now know it.

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Manfred Thierry Mugler 1948 - 2022 - i-D

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Healing and empowerment: Gaden Shartse monks return to Nevada County – The Union

Posted: at 10:11 am

The Gaden Shartse monks have returned to Northern California, and will be offering different teachings, healings, and empowerments during their week-and-a-half stay in Grass Valley.

The monks visit includes the construction of a sand mandala that will be dissolved into Wolf Creek following its completion on Jan 29.

The majority of the events, including the construction of the sand mandala, will take place at Banner Community Guild, at 12629 McCourtney Road, though an animal blessing will take place Sunday at Animal Save, 520 E. Main St., in Grass Valley.

10 a.m., 10:45 a.m. and 11:30 a.m. Saturday: Personal healings; 2 p.m.: Teaching on this precious life (part two), first noble truth; 7 p.m.: Medicine Buddha empowerment.

10 a.m. Sunday: Vajravidharan group healing; 2 p.m.: Animal Blessing at Animal Save, 520 E. Main St., Grass Valley.

2 p.m. Monday: Teaching on aging (part one), second noble truth (cause and effect); 7 p.m.: Teaching on aging ( part two), third noble truth (attain nirvana).

Tuesday: To be determined.

2 p.m. Wednesday: Chay Drol healing empowerment; 7 p.m.: Teaching on aging (part three), fourth noble truth (six perfections).

2 p.m. Thursday: Teaching on aging (part four), fourth noble truth (eightfold path); 7 p.m.: Prayers for the sick, dying and recently deceased.

2 p.m. Friday: Teaching on dying, death and rebirth; 7 p.m.: Explanation of Dukar sand mandala, followed by the Dukar empowerment.

10 a.m. Jan. 29: Closing ceremony and sand mandala dissolution at noon at Wolf Creek in Grass Valley.

Dates and times are subject to change. The monks are available for house, business and land blessings. Personal healings will take place at the Banner Guild by appointment. Suggested viewing of the sand mandala $1 to $10, and for events $10 to $20.

For more information, contact Joseph at 530-798-9576, sierrafriendsoftibet@gmail.com, http://www.sierrafriendsoftibet.org, and on Facebook at Sierra Friends of Tibet.

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Hearst Foundations Gift Aimed to Expand RISE Program – University of Arkansas Newswire

Posted: at 10:11 am

The Hearst Foundations Inc. has announced a $150,000 gift to the U of A Graduate School to help fund the Razorgrad Institute for Success and Engagement program, or RISE.

The contribution is intended to provide program support and scholarships that will increase enrollment for first-generation and underrepresented graduate students in the RISE program.

The RISE programming is doing exactly what it is designed to do creating a sense of belonging and engagement for underrepresented and first-generation students and introducing them to the University of Arkansas, said Curt Rom, interim dean of the Graduate School and International Education. By helping the participants establish strong relationships, make professional connections on campus and create a sense of place, we are also seeing increased retention and graduation rates for those who participate.

RISE, developed in 2018 to increase diversity among the graduate student population at the U of A, is led by Laura Moix, director of graduate student support. The weeklong program is for 18-20 promising new graduate students from historically underrepresented populations during the transition to graduate education.

The Hearst Foundations funding will allow the RISE program to accept 10 additional students per year in future cohorts, provide financial support for participants to continue in the program during the academic year and extend program-specific offerings beyond the initial week throughout the students first academic year.

We are proud of our long association with the university, said Paul Dino Dinovitz, executive director for the Hearst Foundations San Francisco office. The Hearst Foundations seek transformative initiatives such as this and are pleased to be a partner in the RISE program. Efforts designed to improve access and ensure success for students are more important now than ever before.

RISE participants share in activities focused on self-empowerment, professional development, academic skills and personal growth, while creating a community between friends, mentors, advisers and supporters for their career at the U of A.

Expanding the program is an important part of the Graduate Schools strategic effort to create a more engaged culture and climate of appreciation for diversity and inclusivity.

In the fall of 2020, 22 percent of U of A graduate students were from racially underrepresented populations. This percentage is strong compared with other SEC institutions, whose diverse graduate enrollment ranges from 17 to 21 percent in a typical year.

The increased funding from the Hearst Foundations will allow RISE programming to expand the sense of belonging that minority graduate students experience by participating in the program.

RISE partners with numerous groups for its programming. These include the UofA Office of Entrepreneurship and Innovation; student Counseling and Psychological Services; University Libraries; the School of Art; the Office of Diversity, Equity and Inclusion; the Jane B. Gearhart Full Circle Food Pantry; Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art; and employees from UofA departments including Communication, Gender Studies, Latin American and Latino Studies, and African and African American Studies.

The Hearst Foundations initially invested in engineering education diversity at the U of A in 1991, when they awarded their first grant to support doctoral fellowships for female and minority engineering students. The organization also provided endowment funding to the College of Engineering to support the Women In Engineering program and additional financial gifts to the Engineering Career Awareness Program scholarship fund.

About the Hearst Foundations:The Hearst Foundations are independent private philanthropies operating separately from the Hearst Corporation. Since their founding in the 1940s by William Randolph Hearst, the Foundations have awarded more than 20,000 grants to nonprofit organizations and institutions in the fields of education, health, culture and social service.

About the University of Arkansas:As Arkansas' flagship institution, the U of A provides an internationally competitive education in more than 200 academic programs. Founded in 1871, the U of A contributes more than$2.2 billion to Arkansas economythrough the teaching of new knowledge and skills, entrepreneurship and job development, discovery through research and creative activity while also providing training for professional disciplines. The Carnegie Foundation classifies the U of A among the top 3% of U.S. colleges and universities with the highest level of research activity.U.S. News & World Reportranks the U of A among the top public universities in the nation. See how the U of A works to build a better world atArkansas Research News.

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Ilyasah Shabazz, Daughter of Malcolm X and Dr. Betty Shabazz `71 to be Keynote Speaker January 19 at NJCU’s 33rd Annual Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr….

Posted: at 10:11 am

JERSEY CITY, N.J. | Professor and author Ilyasah Shabazz, the daughter of Malcolm X and Dr. Betty Shabazz `71, will be the keynote speaker on Wednesday, January 19, 2022 when New Jersey City University (NJCU) holds its 33rd annual Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Celebration. The event, sponsored by NJCUs Lee Hagan Africana Studies Center, will be held from 10 a.m. to 12 p.m.

Due to the recent rise in COVID-19 cases, the event will now be held in a virtual format for the general public, rather than in-person on campus. Attendance is free by registering in advance at https://njcu.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_SlO2nS2vRumlC9icLUKBhA.

Following the keynote remarks by Shabazz, there will be a question-and-answer session with the audience as she is interviewed by moderator Dr. Natoschia Scruggs, the director of the Hagan Center.

Shabazzs mother, Dr. Betty Shabazz, is a distinguished alumna, having earned a Bachelor of Arts in Health Education and School Nursing from NJCU, then known as Jersey City State College, in 1971.

Ilyasah Shabazz is an award-winning author, educator, and producer. She has authored five historical novels and has served as project advisor for the PBS award-winning documentary film, Prince Among Slaves. She is co-chairperson of the Malcolm X & Dr. Betty Shabazz Memorial and Educational Center. In her work to preserve the legacy of her parents, she has dedicated herself to institution building and intergenerational leadership development with the tenets of diversity, equity, and inclusion.

Ms. Shabazz has furthered her community impact with the City University of New Yorks Office of Academic Affairs, where she created curriculum to encourage higher education for underserved, inner-city high school dropouts. She has worked with the Office of the Mayor in Mount Vernon as Director of Public Affairs & Special Events. She founded and produced a young adult development program aiming to provide insight on social justice and encouraging personal empowerment. As president and founder of Ilyasah Shabazz Enterprises, she produces a variety of forums dedicated to power, possibility, and sovereignty.

Ms. Shabazz is a member of the Soar Higher Cabinet Committee for the State University of New York at New Paltz; a member of the Advisory Council for the Equal Rights Amendment Coalition; a member of Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc.; and serves as a Trustee for the Harlem Symphony Orchestra.

Ms. Shabazz holds a Master of Science in Education and Human Resource Development from Fordham University and a Bachelor of Science in Biology from SUNY-New Paltz. Currently, she is an adjunct professor at John Jay College of Criminal Justice in New York City, where she teaches Perspectives on Justice in the Africana World. Grounded in the commitments of her parents, Ms. Shabazz emphasizes empowerment and inclusion in her teaching and scholarship.

About NJCU: New Jersey City University is an institution of higher learning with an audacious goal: the development of our students, our city, our communities, our state, and the world beyond. We are a game-changing force for our students and their families. Whether our students are enrolled in one of our 50 undergraduate, 28 graduate or three doctoral programs, NJCU provides an affordable, diverse environment, and an exceptionally supportive facultyall of which prepares them to be critical thinkers in a global landscape.

Were also changing the game for our city, our communities, and our state. As the educational anchor institution in Jersey City, weve established partnerships to ensure the areas growth directly benefits our students and community members. We seek to improve the lives of everyone in the Garden State, whether creating a home for the arts, bringing educational programs to K-12 students, offering bachelors degrees in partnership with community colleges, or providing professional development opportunities for adults.

At NJCU, were not just educating minds, were nourishing souls and lifting communities. Were changing the game.

http://www.NJCU.edu

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Ilyasah Shabazz, Daughter of Malcolm X and Dr. Betty Shabazz `71 to be Keynote Speaker January 19 at NJCU's 33rd Annual Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr....

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Hikaru Utada Returns, With BAD Mode & A Better Sense of Self – Billboard

Posted: at 10:11 am

One could argue that the world has been stuck in BAD MODE for a few years now.

Granted, its not all bad: for many, including Hikaru Utada, its also been a time of reprioritizing relationships, taking internal inventory and doing the hard work of self-care. That process has resulted not only in new music from the Japanese-American singer their first album in four years, BAD MODE, is out Wednesday (Jan. 19) on Milan Records/Sony Music Masterworks but in significant personal revelations along the way.

Hikki the nickname affectionately adopted by their fans first soared to staggering heights of stardom in Japan in 1998, at the age of 15, with the self-penned, co-produced singles Automatic and Time Will Tell, followed by their record-shattering 1999 debut First Love, which remains the bestselling album in Japanese history. Their imagery-rich songwriting style paired with an ever-evolving sound blurring elements of R&B, pop, rock, jazz and electronica resulted in millions of records sold over the years. Myriad contributions to movie, TV and video game soundtracks included, among their most beloved work, the themes for the Kingdom Hearts franchise, including Hikari and its English version, Simple & Clean.

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In the mid 00s, they traded omnipresence in Japan for relative obscurity in the United States, returning stateside for a new challenge: an electro-experimental English opus. Exodus, one of the earliest major label crossover efforts for an Asian pop star, spawned the Billboard U.S. Dance Club Songs chart-topper Devil Inside, which appeared in Queer as Folk.

Exodus was not a major commercial success, nor was R&B-heavy 2009 follow-up This Is The One, but a pioneering feat nonetheless especially at a time when popular acts hailing from Asia were still largely absent from the U.S. charts, and before social media and streaming allowed for greater access to global entertainers. Still, Exodus would go on to enjoy fan-favorite status, and its liberated spirit would even inspire the BAD MODE sessions nearly two decades later.

The notoriously low-key singer, who spent much of their life traveling between the U.S. and Japan, now finds their home and heart stationed in London, preparing the release of their latest record. While steeped in R&B melodies reminiscent of their early era, BAD MODE is among their most electronic endeavors in years from the dazzling One Last Kiss, to self-empowerment dance-pop anthem Find Love, to Somewhere Near Marseilles, which plays like a 12-minute extended remix.

Its a notable shift for Hikaru, who speaks of getting sonically very weird again following 2016s Fantme, a moving meditation on life and loss, and the introspective follow-up, Hatsukoi, two years later. Although the multi-talented musician is often solely responsible for composing their own music, a few key guests supply additional flourishes, including PC Music maestro A.G. Cook as well as British producer Sam Shepard (better known as Floating Points), pushing the tracks and the artist into new musical territory. Theres also one particularly surprising collaborator: their 6-year-old son.

BAD MODE is also the first record since Hikarus headline-making Instagram Live last year, during which they came out as nonbinary. The brief announcement seemed impromptu, but was actually anything but and was just as quickly met with an outpouring of global love and support. Fittingly, BAD MODE is all about love and support too, especially and crucially for oneself.

In a candid conversation, Hikaru spoke to Billboard about their new record and accompanying concert special, identity, navigating fame at a young age, and improving all forms of their relationships.

BAD MODE is an unexpected title. What does the term mean to you?

Its a weird mixture of English and Japanese, actually. I know it doesnt make a lot of sense in English. It doesnt really either in Japanese. Its a modern thing, more with the youth. In Japanese, when you take the English word bad, like Oh, it gives me the bad, it means that it gets me depressed, or gives me bad vibes. So bad is short for bad vibes. The way Ive used it in the song is the opposite of feeling amazing and being in a great situation. Its, in a nutshell, being a little bit depressed, or just going through a bit of a low period.

Is that how you would describe the period of making this album?

It wasnt the overall feeling in the period I was making the album, but we all have dips. Ive been depressed and great, all those things. At the time I wrote the song, as human beings, we were all going through a difficult time with the pandemic.

Also, in personal ways with my close friends and family, there were a lot of things that made me want to be supportive. What does it mean to be a good, supportive friend, or family member, or partner, or lover, or whatever relationship you have with another person? That song was me thinking about, What would I want from someone? And how can I do that for someone else? Ultimately, that was the answer. How can I be independent and have a good relationship with myself so I can improve my relationships with those around me?

In a Q&A last year, you explained that on previous albums, your music was inspired by your relationships with others, but that this album was shaping up to be more about a relationship with yourself.

Yes. In the time I made the songs on the album, I was really focusing on working on the relationship with myself, self-love and just the whole. I love RuPaul, and Im such a big fan of RuPauls Drag Race. Its so inspiring and moving. The main message being: if you cant love yourself, how are you going to love somebody else? Amen! I was just thinking, Yes! That is it, exactly.

So, its safe to say Drag Race helped inspire this album?

Yes.

Do you have any favorite queens?

I began watching from the first season. So many of them are good well, all of them are really good. But something thats been fresh in my mind is the UK series, and Bimini Bon Boulash. She just really stood out to me. I wish shed won. I related to the growth. I get excited when I feel myself growing or opening up or discovering something about myself. I feel like I saw that during that season with her. I think thats why I felt very personally involved.

It feels like the right time to mention this: a decade ago, I wrote about coming out through the music of Exodus. You shared it in one of, I think, your first English tweets, and said it gave you some insight into the reason for the high count of your gay fans. First, I want to say thank you for that

No, thank you for that.

I was wondering if you had thoughts on how your music has resonated with the queer community.

Yes. When I noticed I seemed to have a lot of queer fans, it just seemed natural to me. I didnt find it surprising. It just made sense. Theres a sense of being an outsider, or not being able to be yourself, which is horrible. Fearing that you wont be accepted the way you are. I relate to that a lot. It makes me happy when I hear that my loneliness, or my sense of being an outsider, is something that can be shared. We can feel that together.

I also dont think youve discussed your Pride stream announcement much further yet, and wanted to give you the opportunity to do so.

I didnt know the word nonbinary until probably not even a full two years before that. When I came across the idea of it in Japanese, theres this expression, fish scales fall off of your eyeballs. (Me kara uroko ga ochiru.) Its a weird expression, but thats exactly what I felt. Its a moment of eureka, or shock, almost.

When I was with boys, I felt like I was trying to be a boy. When I was with girls, I felt like I was trying to be a girl. Nothing felt completely natural to me. There was a bit of forcing myself somehow in social situations, or seeing my own body and every time thinking, Oh, what? Wellokay. But when I brought up things like that with people I trust, it was always like, Oh well, youre this kooky artist. I never met anyone who said, Oh my God, I know what thats like. I just thought it was a me thing. To know there were loads of people out there feeling something similar, it was the most validating experience Ive ever had. It just changed everything my relationship with the world and myself but it wasnt anything I felt I needed to tell everyone.

Time went on. I saw people with big platforms saying, This is the least I can do. Visibility is so important. I was really feeling that. I thought, Okay, what have I got to lose?

The Instagram Q&A coincided with that. I usually notice a theme in the questions. A lot of people were asking or the ones that stood out to me, maybe about being gay, not being able to come out, feeling guilty because they have a partner but cant tell the rest of the world. There were a lot of people saying, After trying so long to be liked by everyone, I no longer know who I am. I felt those were connected issues. It made me think, What can I do?

The urge to do what I could was growing, but I was still really scared to say it officially. I thought, Wow, its scary for me, and I dont even have to worry about getting fired over this or losing family support. I know all my friends and family will be fine, and Im still really scared. All Im scared of is losing some kind of public image some people I dont even know might have. Thats silly. If I say it, it might have a positive effect. At the end of the day, I was just being honest, so what harm could it do?

But it was still scary. I remember shaking a bit before saying it. I was like, Ill just try to say this casually as I can, but I really needed to have my big teddy bear Kuma behind me. [laughs] I had to go off social media for a while after that, because the reaction was quite intense, especially in Japan. But Im really happy that I said that Im nonbinary. It was a good decision. All the love and support was really amazing.

It was an incredible move, and I think it inspired many people. As you said, the visibility does matter.

Thank you.

When it comes to social media, you tweet life observations here and there, and on Instagram, you share objects you find. There was also a time you did blog updates. What is your relationship to social media now? Are you looking at it?

Im not very active on it. I just dont feel the need to be. Often, I think, Oh, I should be advertising about work-related stuff, or mention that I have an album coming. I do more of that on Twitter, but I like just sharing the stuff I see.

I really like finding things. Theres a sense of being lost, something that was left behind. It makes me imagine the person or thing that has lost this thing that I found. Both ends. Im serious. I found another plaster bandage on the ground today and got really excited. I took a photo. I so look forward to posting it on Instagram. Ive just come to point where Im like, Ugh, Im crap at using it as a promotional thing, but its okay.

As long as it sparks joy. Most people have a negative relationship with social media. I think its interesting what insights we do get into your personal life on the album. On Not in the Mood, is the little voice there your son?

Yeah. Its my son. I was working on the track at home in this room, and he just walked in and sat on my lap and I said, You want to listen? He was listening to it, and said, Oh, how about this? And he began singing his idea. I was like, Oh yeah, thats good. You want to put that down? And he stood on my chair, sang into the mic properly with headphones on. It was really nice, so it made it into the song.

I didnt use it just because its my son. I told him I cant promise you itll be in the song, but it might make it. When I played him the final product, I was like, See? You sound amazing. Youre in the end. Its the best part. Hes like, Yeah. I think that my part should be more in the other choruses too, like an echo to your singing.

Wow! So hes got the musical ear already.

Yeah. He has ideas. I love that hes fearless, and that hes confident and expressing himself.

How aware is he of the Hikaru Utada legacy?

He is aware of it. He came to my tour in Japan at the end of 2018. He saw the dress rehearsal, and one show in Tokyo, and one in Osaka. He remembers that pretty well and knows my songs. He says that Im his favorite singer. I just [smiling] Aww. But he listens to other stuff! I dont just make him listen to my songs! No, no other artists! [laughs]

But its really cool. He says he wants to be a singer. And a scientist. And a football player and an explorer. He knows Im a singer. If we go somewhere, like were at the hairdresser and hes getting a haircut, hes like, Yeah, I want to be a singer. My moms a singer, too. I feel really lucky that he can see the stuff Ive made and hes proud of me.

Thats so sweet. If you debuted today at the same age you did then, do you think it would have been easier?

It would be more difficult, probably. It was difficult enough at that point, just having the loss of privacy and having paparazzi all around. Being a teenager is hard. Being 14 is a difficult time. Youre so sensitive. Your brain is still changing. You dont know who you are yet. You dont need all these people adding lenses that are not even yours to your own view of yourself. But thats what happens when you get famous. It hurts to be misunderstood. I think you can learn ways of letting it affect you less, but I dont think its possible to be completely immune to the hurtfulness that comes along with being misunderstood. Or the loneliness.

Im glad I just had tabloids and paparazzi. It was the dawn of this whole Internet age, and those forums. I was 15 and I came across a forum that said, The lets-talk-st-about-Hikaru Utada forum. Fked up. It was just so unnecessary. Looking back, Im grateful, because it helped me understand early on that its so not personal. They just needed someone to talk st about. I was visible and readily available. If you seem successful, its easy for people to think, Look at how great that persons doing. I hate that person. It had nothing to do with me. It taught me how to separate it from myself. It could have been anyone famous.

You live in London now, where you recorded a special concert showcase premiering at the same time as this record. Can you talk about preparing this, the set list choices, and how the overall experience was for you?

I didnt really know what to expect going into it, but it turned out to be a really special and intimate performance. I loved the closer interaction I got with everyone involved in the project because it was a small team compared to a tour, and I think the great, warm vibe we had going from rehearsals allowed me to share more intimate sides of my creative process during the performance.

And the band look and sound amazing. Its so nice to be able to see so much of what theyre doing and all their gear, etc. Originally, we thought of doing the entire album but not all the songs were done in time for the show. Im glad we got to throw in some songs from the past because of that though both from Exodus. They seemed to fit in with the feeling of the new material and it was a fun challenge.

There are some songs that have been huge hits and major milestones in your career. But when you look back, are there specific records or songs that youre personally particularly proud of, and why?

If I have to pick something, I would say Exodus, because I can appreciate how bold I was, and it still sounds weird and fresh and exciting to me and Fantme, which marked the beginning of a new chapter of my life as an artist and as a human being. They were the most honest and courageous Id allowed myself to be up to that point.

I would compare the new album to Exodus in ways. Was it a conscious decision?

I was listening to more clubby, dance-y stuff. That sounds like a really unprofessional way of expressing that genre. [laughs] Yeah, I was into house music quite a lot around when I made Find Love. There were new artists I discovered, like Moodymann and Glenn Underground, that I got really into. I think if you listen to Glenn Undergrounds May Datroit, youll see the influence on Find Love.

With the two albums before BAD MODE [Fantme and Hatsukoi], they were experimental to me in the sense that I used a lot of live instrumentation, which was a great learning experience. I was lucky. There were these great musicians I had access to. It was about trusting other people and letting something happen that was not entirely under my control. I could make a demo and give instructions in some ways, but then you have to trust them and roll with it and see what happens. It was a nice way to build confidence and feel a bit more grown-up about everything.

After two albums like that, I knew I wanted to do something sonically very weird again. I wanted to go back there. I thought back on Exodus and felt a similar feeling, like a liberation happening within myself. I just wanted to let it happen, with more electronic sounds that I built from zero.

I got some great help on this album. It was really cool collaborating with Nariaki Obukuro. Ive been working with him for some time on his stuff, too. And A.G. Cook and Floating Points such a blessing. I feel so lucky I got to meet them and work with them. Theres a friendship as well. Making new friends who I can also make really interesting stuff withthats been really cool.

Youve always been hands-on with production. When do you finally say, Okay, actually yes, its time to collaborate?

To me, making music has always been really private. Its my safe space that came out of necessity, almost. So its been a lot of just me, and needing to feel alone and safe to get into it. I havent really collaborated that much, mainly for that reason. Its been difficult to share that space and open up. But I did, even on songs I basically did most of the tracks on. I wanted some outside help when it got technical so I could say, This is the thing Ive laid down, but I want to change the sound to something a bit more like this. That just made more sense to me.

It was finding people that were just cool and flexible. Maybe also me being more secure, so I could tell them what it is that I want. I think I got a lot better at it. Before, I couldnt really explain that to someone. Working with musicians gave me a great deal of practice in verbally explaining what direction I want the song to go. Ultimately, music is a shared language. At the same time, theyve helped me socially and musically.

This is also the first time youve had Japanese and English versions of multiple songs on one album.

I stopped placing restrictions on myself. Why not have both English songs and Japanese songs in one album? I live and breathe in both languages, and looking back, it feels weird that I thought I had to separate those sides of myself.

Is there something new youve learned about yourself in making this record?

I learned that I am a person with love. I was always scared that I dont know what love is, that theres something wrong with me, and the feeling that people talk about seemed elusive and mysterious. I still dont think I experience love as a feeling.

Ive come to my own idea of love, which is that for me, loving someone means committing to do my best to always make the other person feel loved, no matter what theyre going through. And Ive been trying to do that for myself, too. Working on songs about self-love, self-esteem, and being there for someone, like Find Love, PINK BLOOD and BAD MODE, were a part of my journey in getting where I am now.

What does success look like to Hikaru Utada in 2022, and has your definition of success changed over the years?

Success. Wow. I dont think anyones ever really asked me that before.

I think of my favorite quote from this Japanese poet and novelist, Kenji Miyazawa. No one knows what true happiness is, least of all me. But no matter how hard it is, if you keep to the path you deem to be true, you can overcome any mountain. With each step in that direction, people come closer to happiness, said the lighthouse keeper, comfortingly. I agree, said the young man, closing his eyes as if in prayer, but to reach the truest happiness, one must make their way through many sorrows. Night on the Galactic Railroad.

I dont really believe in the concept of success. I think its just an idea that exists in our minds. I also dont believe in failure, because whatever you do now can change the meaning of something that happened in the past. Something you thought was a failure, you could look back on and realize, Oh, that got me here now and I feel successful, or vice versa. I think it just depends on what moment youre looking back on. Its an interpretation, and it always changes. Thats whats great about doing stuff and continuing to do stuff. The only failure is if I were to give up trying. And so, I suppose a successful year for me would mean a year of continuing to try. Trying, learning, and growing.

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Hikaru Utada Returns, With BAD Mode & A Better Sense of Self - Billboard

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American Hospital Dubai to emphasise the advantages of integrating technology into medicine – Gulf News

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Six months ago, American Hospital Dubai graced Arab Health 2021 with an impressive stand Shape of the Future. Breaking the barriers of the conventional exhibition, the stand justified American Hospital Dubai as the centre of medical excellence.

A year later, here we are once again ready to be propelled right into the future of healthcare. American Hospital Dubai will execute another immersive stand.

Over the course of the year, the medical giants have only looked forward. They have been consistent in their relentless pursuit of exploring new avenues of technology that continue to aid towards the progress of the human-health relationship. Justifiably so, the stand at Arab Health 2022, exemplifies the evolution of healthcare, technology, and the power of experiential through the Pillars of Evolution.

This year, we will be showcasing American Hospital Dubais breakthroughs in key disease fields, says Sherif Beshara, Group CEO of Mohammad & Obaid AlMulla Group, the holding company of American Hospital Dubai.

Our centres of excellence in cancer, diabetes, cardiology, orthopaedics, and neuroscience have been path-definers in treatment efficacy and transformative medicine, leading the fields with evidence-based care delivered with the highest values of patient-focused care. These dedicated centres are leaders in their field owing to our commitment to providing the best and latest treatment methods and application of medical discoveries.

The stand is a manifestation of the grit of the scholars and medical professionals of American Hospital Dubai to always go above and beyond while keeping the synergy between man and machine at the core of the healthcare experience. A key theme this year is healthcare transformation, and American Hospital Dubai truly understands the value of transformation.

To completely know the importance of transformation, we must first know who the change will benefit and then work to make that happen, explains Beshara. These imperatives alone define the purpose of transformation. The reality is that myriad influences have shaped todays patient: greater access to information, self-empowerment through technology, redefined expectations from healthcare entities and a reshaped view of personal wellness and safety due to the pandemic.

These have had an inalterable impact on patient attitudes and outlook. We are witnessing a new era in the urgency for healthcare entities to move beyond diagnosis and treatment and speed towards prevention and prediction. So, any form of transformation in healthcare must ultimately be patient focused. The shift must be from service-provider focused operations to customer-intended facilities and performance, and relook process, approach, and values.

This year the purpose was also to emphasise the evolutionary advantages of integrating technology into the field of medicine. The feats of American Hospital Dubai have been mammoth and certainly complex. Hence, there was a strong possibility that their achievements could get lost in translation.

Lets face it, comprehending extended medical terms isnt everyones cup of tea, and add revolutionary technology to the mix, youre looking dead in the eye at a rather tedious high-school science lecture right after your lunch break. Nobody wants that.

And that was the driving thought that led to the execution of the Pillars of Evolution. The holistically crafted stand is set to be immersive, interactive, and educate the visitors in a manner that is easy to decipher without compromising on the magnitude of their achievements.

This is made possible through multifaceted activations powered by modern event technology. Heres an insight into what can be expected once set foot into the Pillars of Evolution:

The Holo-Lens: A mixed reality activation that immerses you into a 360 educational experience of American Hospitals Oncology department.

Object Recognition Table: A live x-ray performed on a display mannequin provides an in-depth insight into the surgeries conducted across three major departments Cardiology, Neurology, and Orthopaedics.

The Robotic Arm Surgery: The Robotic Arm, the star activation of last years stand, makes another comeback. This time, evolved, depicts a more accurate representation of the pioneering robotic surgeries introduced at American Hospital Dubai.

Swipe and Show: An interactive screen activation that allows you to learn more about stem cell therapy and in-vitro fertilisation. Made easy to comprehend with infographics and video graphics.

RFID: Through the use of RFID-activated tags, the activations showcase how doctors and medical professionals can easily navigate the services at American Hospital through their newly digitalised operations system. An initiative that was executed through a collaboration of American Hospital Dubai and the engineers at Siemens.

Venturing into the Pillars of Evolution is en-route once again to set the tone for exhibition stands across the region. While perfectly showcasing American Hospital Dubai as the trailblazers of medical evolution, it also allows all of us to truly embark on an immersive journey in witnessing the impact of the experiential.

The purpose of healthcare is one-pointed: it is all about delivering patient satisfaction and encouraging preventive health, says Beshara. Everything we do to achieve that aim is deserving of constant scrutiny of approach, ethical impetuses, practical methodologies, repurposing values, and empowering healthcare personnel to be the flag bearers of a healthier future for humanity. American Hospital Dubai will embody all these values at the Arab Health 2022.

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American Hospital Dubai to emphasise the advantages of integrating technology into medicine - Gulf News

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A Collegian alumna’s journey of unfolding the relationship between sports and female empowerment – The Massachusetts Daily Collegian

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At one point in her life, Kathleen Ralls feared her true passion would delay her progress.

I sometimes wondered, Would my interest in slant towards female sports be a negative for me as I tried to advance in the [Massachusetts Daily] Collegian?

But since the start of her journalism career, her appreciation for womens athletics has been a driving force in her work. Now editing her first book for publication, Ralls has epitomized her passion for writing about women in sports as she prepares to publish a book which centers on female athletes and their stories, and the relationship between sports and female empowerment.

In 1998, Ralls sat in the office of the Collegian, editing articles, covering beats and completing daily tasks that other sports editors past and present have done. After starting as an English major when she arrived on campus at the University of Massachusetts, Ralls quickly switched to journalism her sophomore year. As her dedication to the paper grew, so did her progress within the section.

Upon arriving at UMass in 1997, Ralls, a Chelmsford native, prided herself in being a multi-sport athlete her entire life. After hearing about the Collegian, she immediately wanted to begin writing about sports. Unlike the teams she had played on most of her life, her teammates at the Collegian were predominately male; thus Ralls found herself not only gravitating more toward the few women involved with the sports section, but also providing coverage for the less popular womens teams.

It was fun for me to make friends and find other women who are as passionate about sports, and writing, Ralls said of her time at the paper.

The summer before her senior year she interned at the Lowell Sun, mainly covering golf along with other various sports in the area. The paper continued to use Ralls as what she described as a Western Mass sports resource, and allowed her to write stories and cover sports for the Sun throughout her senior year.

With a light schedule her senior year, Ralls began carefully selecting activities and beat coverage that catered to her interests. A retired field hockey player herself, she stepped back onto the field in a coaching role at Amherst High School.

In fact, that was one of the things that the other sports editor said was, Dont you want to cover UMass football? and I was like, No, I would rather coach high school field hockey than cover football, Ralls said with laughter.

That theme continued following her graduation when the Sun offered her a three-day-a-week gig writing for them, working the phones but still having the freedom to focus on coaching. Eventually, upon realizing that she had a lot of time on her hands, she began substitute teaching which turned into a new chapter of her life.

At the age of 22, Ralls recognized that her experience at the Collegian could help get her a free masters degree which is when her journey at American University began.

Again her love for sports drew her to a second job, working in the sports information department while getting her masters degree in teaching. The university recognized her strength in writing and requested her help on writing website features and media guides. The common thread of writing as a profession that came to fruition at UMass, continued.

And the theme of women in sports continued as well.

Flash forward to 2015, after a spending 15 years as a high school history teacher and coach of various sports, Ralls was awarded a Fulbright Scholarship. She moved to Oslo, Norway and served as a roving scholar of American Studies while her husband remained in Lowell, Massachusetts.

I came back home and thought if I can do this Fulbright which was just an amazing experience, I traveled to 50 different schools across Norway that year and taught about American culture that maybe teaching wasnt the end-all-be-all for me. And thats when I pursued the PhD.

Ralls career path continued to change as she began to build a life centered around work that involved her true passions and interests.

Initially, I was going to pursue research on civics education, because I was a high school history teacher for 15 years, Ralls said. But two-and-a-half years into my program, I have one course left before I started the real like dissertation research.

I realized that what I was really passionate about wasnt civics education, compared to my love of female sports and empowerment.

Then it was off to Ethiopia to play catch-up on nearly two and a half years of research time she had lost when studying civics education.

Ralls research question was one she could have asked herself a decade prior sitting in the basement of the Student Union wondering if her interest would stunt her professional development and ultimate career goals.

Do girls who participate in sport perceive greater voice empowerment as a result?

For Ralls, the answer is yes. Ralls believes her participation in sports as both an athlete and as a sportswriter helped her become more confident in using her voice.

My dissertation successfully passed, and I published some academic articles. But the academic articles are pretty dry because thats what they are, Ralls said. I realized I wanted to pursue it on a more personal level, this idea of female empowerment and leadership and sports.

Ralls came across a program called the Creator Institute, which is run by a Georgetown professor and walks participants through the steps of writing a book. In May of 2021, she began the program and is now in the second stage of editing her book.

For some journalists, writing a book is a short- or long-term goal. For Ralls, it was neither. As a lover and appreciator of feature stories during her time at the Collegian, things began to feel similar when she stepped into an authorial role from a book perspective versus a journalistic lens.

Each time Ive done different kinds of writing, whether its journalism with UMass or the Lowell Sun, or work as an SID, or the dissertation academic writing, every time Ive learned how to stretch my writing Ralls said. There is a lot to learn about writing, which is actually really exciting for me.

The book features 12 different women who hail from various professions, backgrounds, ages, etc. Ranging from lawyers, nurses, teachers, coaches, prison workers and professors, Ralls felt like every conversation she had for the book was reminiscent of writing a lengthy feature story.

Being able to think about the stories that they shared with me, their personalities, their voices, what Ive learned about them on social media for some, and trying to pull that all together, and be fair, [] accurate, [] knowledgeable, and [] interesting is a really big challenge Im finding with this book but its really exciting as well.

It wasnt about how much money each of the women made or how well-established they were in their respective professions it was just experience. Whether with women from the Middle East, the United States or Africa, the conversations were all created around her central idea: sports and its influence on female empowerment.

The central idea of Ralls life became the central idea for her book, and after years of exploring, she now has a clearer path than ever before: getting her book published by May 2022 and turning her love for feature writing and womens sports into an inspiring read for lovers of sports across the world.

Lulu Kesin can be reached at [emailprotected] or followed on Twitter @Lulukesin.

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A Collegian alumna's journey of unfolding the relationship between sports and female empowerment - The Massachusetts Daily Collegian

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