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Kelli King-Jackson, ACC

Coaching for Black women leading in white spaces.

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kelli

Foremothers

May 9, 2018

My Auntie Deborah recently produced an anthology called, “All the Women in My Family Sing.”  Go buy a copy!  Seriously.  It is not surprising that my aunt is responsible for such a powerful body of work.  She is an established author, journaler, and storyteller.  Plus, she has edited many papers for me over the years, including my college admissions essay.  I guess you would call her my writing muse.  Auntie Deborah writes from a place of tender authenticity.  She gets it from her daddy, Saunders King (AKA Grampy), who was a musician.  And from her mama, (AKA Grammie) who taught me, a woman does not have to have a baby unless she wants to.  

Factoid: Auntie Deborah is, in fact, my second cousin.  She became my aunt because her parents – my aunt and uncle – operated as my grandparents for most of my life.  My grandfather was her father’s brother.  They and their wives were close.  This meant that my grandparents ‘shared’ me with Deborah’s parents.  When my grandmother died I was nine years old.  So while she was the guiding presence in my early years, I spent more time building memories with my Grammie, Jo Frances King.  Grammie was a white woman, married to my beautiful, Hershey’s chocolate complexioned Grampy.  They loved and protected me.  They guided me in a way I believe my grandparents would have had they lived to see us become adults.

While I loved them both, Grammie was my beacon.  We wrote letters, talked on the phone and enjoyed endless hours of laughter.  I cannot remember a significant time in my life where she did not have a role before her death in May 2006.  I miss her.  Every.  Single.  Day.  

Take a listen to Auntie Deborah talk about Grammie (she starts around the 3:15 mark):

Grammie was an amazing woman to live and look up to.  She was humble, straightforward and generous with her time and love.  I spent many a Sunday with her.  When I moved back to California at 25 years of age to attend graduate school, my seventy-year-old plus Grammie taught me to drive. 

A bit of Grammie lives on in us all.  She was foundational like that.  

Watching Auntie Deborah talk about Grammie on this Tuesday evening leading up to Mother’s Day hit me kind of hard.  I was reminded of how much Grammie kept our family in-tact when we all, at various points in our lives, seemed to be falling apart.  Watching Auntie Deborah sit on that stage and own her power as a woman, rejuvenated me a bit.  It made me remember that no matter what I am facing, I have what I need already planted deep inside myself.  

I keep a note I wrote to Grammie on Mother’s Day 2006 taped to my wall.  In it, I wrote “I miss you lots.  I know my schedule has been crazy.  Please remember that you’re always in my thoughts…and prayers.  You taught me so much and now I’m learning to live those lessons with my family.  I take the kids to the library.  We go play tennis as a family.  Trey picks lemons for me off my lemon trees.  The seeds you planted in me are in full bloom.  Thanks for being so wonderful to me — I love you more than I can say. Kelli”

This year, I am happy to say my busy is not as out of whack as it has been in years prior.  I do not feel a depression about my infertility.  I am more intentional in my time commitments.  I am more generous with my ‘no’ and more conservative with my ‘yes.’ I can say all this in spite of the fact that life has been really hard the past year.  I am walking in my truth and power like never before.  

My Auntie Deborah holding space for women just like my Grammie taught her/us to was the reminder I needed that the legacy of our foremother(s) is our collective responsibility to pass down better ways of doing and being to those who come behind us.

I will be that beacon of light for my daughter and granddaughter.

Our foremothers will lead us home. 

This is the real meaning of Mother’s Day. 

kelli

Quick Reset

April 25, 2018

This morning I (begrudgingly) decided to write in my family journal – a task my husband asked us all to do a few weeks ago. 😬
Actually, he asked us to write prayers for each other. 
I realized today I’ve been in my feelings about some stuff which is why I have been blocked. 🚫
A quick aroma reset on what I am feeling and the words finally started to flow. 💐


The first words were more rant than prayer. 🤷🏾‍♀️
The good thing about removing blocks is once the negative is out, the positive energy can flow. 🧘🏾‍♀️
My words became a gratitude list and then prayers for my village. 🙏🏾
My last line to God says: I see you. I get it. I love you.
Lesson: Don’t let ‘hard’ stop you.  Keep going.

kelli

Enneagram Life

March 10, 2018

Because I am a good nerd, I like to spend my birthday alone.  Some years I craft.  Others I read or do a spa day.  This year, my birthday was on a Saturday and my husband surprised me and flew one of my best sisters in from Cali.  Seeing her sweet face made what had been a rough few months 10,000 times lighter.  My husbands timing was perfect because my ‘plans’ had fallen through.  In my head, I had planned to go on a genealogy road trip through the deep south to do some research at local libraries for my special day.  When he shared his plans for my birthday weekend I felt a sigh of relief that I was not in charge of finding something to do to ring in the 4-4.

In the end, things worked out as they always do — just as they should.  I had a great weekend with friends and family.  I got two extra ‘ice days’ off.  Then nearly two weeks after my birthday I enjoyed an Enneagram assessment facilitated by a local Houstonian.

I learned about Enneagram a few years ago but had not done much to pursue it other than reading a few articles.  The few times I had tried to google ‘Enneagram and Houston’ together I had not had much luck.  Most of the workshops that popped up were long past.  Somehow in the midst of the craziness of my family life at the end of 2017, I got a hit.  I found a website of a local facilitator that had an email address.  Within an hour of pressing send, I received a return call and scheduled an appointment.  Life caused both of us to reschedule two different dates but we finally ended up meeting on January 26th.

Persisting to complete my Enneagram assessment was a gift to myself.  Judy says that the Enneagram is what separates me from myself, others and God.  Here are some things I learned about myself in getting my Enneagram assessment:

  1. I am a Type 2 (Giver).  As a Giver my nature is to be caring, helpful, supportive, and relationship-oriented, but I can also be prideful, overly intrusive, and demanding;
  2. I ‘anticipate’ what others need and step in before/regardless of if they ask for help;
  3. It stresses me out to not fill other peoples needs; and
  4. In times of stress I move toward Type 8 (Protector); in times of security, I move toward Type 4 (Romantic).

As with all personality assessments, the results are not exact.  However, what I appreciate about the Enneagram is the spiritual component and the recognition of how our childhoods shape the personalities we present as adults.

I’ll be digging into my Enneagram over the next few years.  If you’ve completed your Enneagram I would love to hear about your results.

kelli

 

State of Our Union 2018

January 31, 2018

Tonight I live-streamed the State of Our Union event.  I was deeply impacted by women who spoke about being underpaid; forced into slavery by owners who held their visas/immigration statuses hostage; women who were sandwiched between caring for their children and aging parents; women organizing in rural communities faced with lack of jobs and increase in opioid addictions; and more.

For half a second I was overwhelmed.  Then I remembered that I was not alone.  Nonprofit workers and supporters across the county are calling for a new day.  In fact, most of my women friends and colleagues are NOT watching 45 (AKA the Leader of the Free World)’s speech but instead committing to an alternative experience. For countless years I have taken seriously my obligation to watch, understand, and analyze the policies lifted high by the Commander-in-Chief.  Until tonight.

As I pulled into my driveway trying to decide on which channel to watch the State of the Union, my friend reminded me of my options.  I considered my friends working for nonprofits, doing critical work for women and girls in local communities across the nation. Who is speaking up for them?!?

After a few minutes of deliberation, I re-committed to the State of Our Union event I RSVP’d to on Facebook.  I am more than glad about my decision.  I listened to women lift their voices for justice high.  Women speaking of racial, economic and gender justice.  Time after time.

This is OUR story.  This is the state of OUR union.  This is the MY story.  And the state of the Union I leave for my daughter and granddaughter matters more than I ever imagined.

I invite you to take a look at the speeches from the State of Our Union and let me know how YOU will stand for the women who come after us.

kelli

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