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Sunday Safe Spaces - Sunday Safe Spaces: Mindfulness and Fatherhood

Sunday Safe Spaces: Mindfulness and Fatherhood

01/13/25 • 64 min

Sunday Safe Spaces

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This month, we welcomed Royce Andrews Porter - a father, designer, investor, therapist, and social wellness entrepreneur. He founded Sensory, a collaborative mindfulness studio and wellness platform supporting BIPOC communities in processing unresolved trauma. Sensory focuses on transforming emotional and relational wounds, into connection through collaborative healing & spiritual partnership using mindfulness, movement, music, and community — both on & offline.
Born in Los Angeles and having experienced foster care, Royce understands the needs of underserved communities. With nearly a decade of experience in meditation, yoga, and breathwork, he attributes his profound transformation to cultivating a spiritual practice, which he calls deep intimacy with God. Formerly a designer and small business owner, Royce pivoted into the wellness space after a traumatic season led him to reassess his repressed emotions, unconscious beliefs, & behavioural patterns. Since then, he’s partnered with organizations like Soho House, Reclamation Ventures, and Austin Community College to support others on their healing journey, who share similar experiences.
Royce’s journey has given him an extraordinarily impactful worldview. It’s the culmination of a person who’s overcome trials and risen out of darkness, navigating entrepreneurship steeped in spiritual alignment, from the lens of the Black American experience. His work is rooted in broad cultural research that embraces a multiplicity of perspectives, centering the lives of BIPOC communities, globally. Bridging an intersection of identities, to achieve healing & connection for generational change.

Disabled But Not Really's mission is to empower and inspire individuals with disabilities to overcome challenges and reach their potential by fostering a mindset of courage, confidence, and competence. They aim to educate individuals and their communities on ways to help improve the overall quality of life for people living with a disability.

You can view these episodes with ASL interpretation on Open Up's YouTube channel. Catch episode previews and more information about Sunday Safe Spaces and other Open Up programming by following us on social media @openuppgh.

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Send us a text

This month, we welcomed Royce Andrews Porter - a father, designer, investor, therapist, and social wellness entrepreneur. He founded Sensory, a collaborative mindfulness studio and wellness platform supporting BIPOC communities in processing unresolved trauma. Sensory focuses on transforming emotional and relational wounds, into connection through collaborative healing & spiritual partnership using mindfulness, movement, music, and community — both on & offline.
Born in Los Angeles and having experienced foster care, Royce understands the needs of underserved communities. With nearly a decade of experience in meditation, yoga, and breathwork, he attributes his profound transformation to cultivating a spiritual practice, which he calls deep intimacy with God. Formerly a designer and small business owner, Royce pivoted into the wellness space after a traumatic season led him to reassess his repressed emotions, unconscious beliefs, & behavioural patterns. Since then, he’s partnered with organizations like Soho House, Reclamation Ventures, and Austin Community College to support others on their healing journey, who share similar experiences.
Royce’s journey has given him an extraordinarily impactful worldview. It’s the culmination of a person who’s overcome trials and risen out of darkness, navigating entrepreneurship steeped in spiritual alignment, from the lens of the Black American experience. His work is rooted in broad cultural research that embraces a multiplicity of perspectives, centering the lives of BIPOC communities, globally. Bridging an intersection of identities, to achieve healing & connection for generational change.

Disabled But Not Really's mission is to empower and inspire individuals with disabilities to overcome challenges and reach their potential by fostering a mindset of courage, confidence, and competence. They aim to educate individuals and their communities on ways to help improve the overall quality of life for people living with a disability.

You can view these episodes with ASL interpretation on Open Up's YouTube channel. Catch episode previews and more information about Sunday Safe Spaces and other Open Up programming by following us on social media @openuppgh.

Previous Episode

undefined - Resources for Healing

Resources for Healing

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Join co-hosts April Jackson and Wesley Hamilton for their monthly Sunday Safe Spaces discussion.
These community conversations for Black, Indigenous and People of Color happen on the 3rd Sunday of every month. Each month we share stories and individual experiences from the intersections of race and disability while exploring healing + wellness tools for mind and body.

Disabled But Not Really's mission is to empower and inspire individuals with disabilities to overcome challenges and reach their potential by fostering a mindset of courage, confidence, and competence. They aim to educate individuals and their communities on ways to help improve the overall quality of life for people living with a disability.

You can view these episodes with ASL interpretation on Open Up's YouTube channel. Catch episode previews and more information about Sunday Safe Spaces and other Open Up programming by following us on social media @openuppgh.

Next Episode

undefined - Sunday Safe Spaces: Ableism and Equity

Sunday Safe Spaces: Ableism and Equity

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This month, we welcome Gina Winstead. A nonbinary member of the LGBTQ+ community as well as a multiracial person, Gina is committed to disrupting systems and building creative solutions that advance education, leadership and access to diverse networks. A native of the Pittsburgh region, she has wide-ranging expertise in community development, nonprofit leadership and local entrepreneurship. Gina is the Carnegie Museums' first vice president for inclusion, diversity, equity, and accessibility (IDEA)

Disabled But Not Really's mission is to empower and inspire individuals with disabilities to overcome challenges and reach their potential by fostering a mindset of courage, confidence, and competence. They aim to educate individuals and their communities on ways to help improve the overall quality of life for people living with a disability.

You can view these episodes with ASL interpretation on Open Up's YouTube channel. Catch episode previews and more information about Sunday Safe Spaces and other Open Up programming by following us on social media @openuppgh.

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