Author name: aharris47

The Maroons of Jamaica: Resistance, Survival, and the Fight for Freedom

Before the Maroons: The Taino and Columbus In 1494, during his second voyage, Christopher Columbus landed on the island the Taíno people called Xaymaca, later known as Jamaica. The Taíno were part of a broader Indigenous Caribbean world with established systems of agriculture, governance, and trade. They were not waiting to be discovered. They had […]

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Handling the Workplace Ambush: Staying Calm, Clear, and in Control

Recognizing the Setup Workplace ambushes rarely announce themselves. They come disguised as casual requests. “Can you meet real quick?” “Do you have a minute?” “Stop by my office at one.” On the surface, these sound harmless. But context matters. If no meeting was announced, no email was sent, and no one else is discussing a

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Standards, Testing, and the Cost of Over-Explaining

Disrespect Is Rarely Random Most people do not disrespect you by accident. They observe you before they ever decide how far to go. They pay attention to how you react under pressure and how quickly you excuse behavior. They test your boundaries in small, almost harmless ways before crossing larger lines. A late reply becomes

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Martha Washington: Power, Slavery, and the Making of an American Icon

Beyond the Portrait When most people hear the name Martha Washington, they picture a powdered wig and a formal portrait. She is often remembered simply as the wife of George Washington. That framing is incomplete. Martha Washington was not a passive figure standing quietly beside a revolutionary hero. Before she married George, she was already

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Attraction, Selection, and Responsibility: Moving Beyond Blame in Conversations About Men

The Emotional Charge Behind the Question When someone asks, “Why don’t we have men like JFK Jr. anymore?” the question is rarely just about appearance. It carries frustration. It carries longing. It carries nostalgia for a certain type of masculinity—polished, confident, charismatic, accomplished. But when that frustration turns into blame—especially collective blame directed at women—it

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William Still and the Radical Power of Remembering

What Slavery Tried to Destroy When we talk about slavery, we often focus on chains, forced labor, and stolen freedom. All of that is true. But there was another violence operating at the same time. Slavery tried to destroy connection. It scattered families across states and generations. It sold children away from parents and siblings

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Can Airplanes Detach and Save Everyone? The Reality Behind the “Escape Cabin” Idea

The Emotional Appeal of a Detachable Cabin The idea sounds powerful at first glance. An airplane is in trouble. Instead of everyone going down with it, the passenger cabin detaches. Parachutes deploy. The cabin floats gently to safety on land or water. No more catastrophic crashes. No more impossible survival odds. It feels like the

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Impermanence and Grief: Learning to Hold On While Letting Go

The Lesson I Wish I Understood Sooner If I could go back twenty-six years to before my mother passed away, I would not change the outcome. I could not. Death does not negotiate. But I would change my understanding. I would change how I viewed impermanence. At the time, I was fighting reality instead of

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When the Problem Isn’t What Happened to You, But How You Showed Up

The Hardest Mirror to Face There comes a moment in growth that feels heavier than any breakup, betrayal, or setback. It is the moment you realize the common denominator in your strained relationships might be you. Not your trauma. Not your past. Not what people did to you. But how you responded. That realization does

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