The Remnants of Slavery
The Remnants of Slavery
What slavery left behind in the mind, the spirit, and the way we see ourselves
My name is Renee Mims, and I’m letting you know now… I’m here as the plot twist.
Folks love a polished story about how far we’ve overcome. They love the songs, the sermons, the celebration, the overcoming stories, and the talk about victory. I get it. That kind of talk moves people to rejoice. But the real question still remains….
Have we really overcome?
Freedom cannot be measured only by what ended on paper. You can dress history up however you want, but the inside of a person will reveal what remains. So will everyday life. And what I see is not finished.
That is what I mean by the remnants of slavery.
The visible brutality is only one layer of this. What concerns me just as much is what stayed in circulation after the fact. Belief carried it. Homes repeated it. Churches reinforced it. Fear protected it. Survival passed it down. After enough time, it stopped looking like conditioning and started looking natural.
Here’s what needs to be clear.
Because of how I look, some people may hear me speak on this and wonder why I’m the one saying it. So let me answer that directly. My birth father was Black, and from the age of one, I was raised in a Black home by an absolutely strong woman.
So no, I did not pull up to this conversation as a bystander.
This history lived in my home.
As a little girl, I remember hearing my mother talk about prejudice and the way she had to move differently because of her skin color. That broke my heart. Something deep in me got disturbed. I could not understand how someone could be treated as less than over color when everybody’s blood is red. Even then, I could feel how wrong that was.
Slavery movies affected me deeply. I could barely sit through them. One film could stay in my spirit for weeks. It was bigger than sadness. I felt grief, anger, and heartbreak all at once. I knew I was looking at evil. I was watching human beings get stripped, degraded, and broken in every way a person can be broken.
So this subject is not casual for me.
For me, this carries history, grief, and deep conviction all at once.
The question that keeps echoing in my mind is:
Have we overcome slavery, or have we only gotten better at talking about survival while still carrying what it left behind?
A shiny label does not make it freedom when the same old programming is still running underneath.
Some of what gets lifted up as faith is really dependence in church clothes.
Holiness gets named while fear is doing half the driving.
Iron was not the only thing used to bind people.
Belief did plenty of that too.
That is where I want to go.
When slavery comes up, most people move straight to the visible brutality, and they should. Forced labor. Families torn apart, and much more I don’t have to name here. Freedom and dignity stripped away. None of that should ever be toned down.
The deeper damage was happening underneath all that violence.
Violence was one part of the system. Belief was another. Messages were planted about suffering, worth, obedience, hope, and power. People were taught how to see themselves and how to interpret what was happening to them.
That kind of conditioning does not just go away with time. It gets baked into culture, passed through language, repeated in families, reinforced in church, and kept alive by fear until people start treating it like it is just the way things are.
That is what stays on my heart.
Buried inside all of this was a devastating lie: real life is somewhere later on, and so are peace, rest, joy, and freedom. Endure now. Bow now. Suffer now. Then maybe, after death, what was denied to you here will finally be handed over.
I do not believe that.
Life begins the moment you take your first breath. If that’s not enough proof then, hmmm.
In my eyes, heaven and hell are not only future destinations people argue about. Both happen here in real life, through a person’s inner world, the condition of their body, the spirit of their home, the choices they keep making, and whether fear or truth is guiding the way they live.
As a result, I feel too many people are postponing life while life is happening now. Does it sound too good to be true to have heaven on earth? Does it sound so off that you can experience hell right now? A lot of folks have been trained to look somewhere beyond themselves while the healing, clarity, and the power they need are rooted in the life they are living right now. Right in this moment!
What I believe, and have been shown by my angels and guides, is this:
The divine lives within you.
That is not decoration to me. I mean it. What is divine is not sitting far off somewhere, hidden behind a building, a title, or somebody else’s control. I believe it is alive within us, woven into breath, awareness, and life itself.
Now consider the kind of separation that creates.
A person taught to search everywhere else first can spend an entire life overlooking the power they always held. Self-doubt replaces inner knowing. Intuition starts feeling dangerous. Authority gets handed over to systems and voices that were never supposed to own that much of a person in the first dang place.
Real damage comes from that kind of fallacy.
History supports that too.
Slavery was enforced with violence, but it was also reinforced through belief. Enslaved people were treated as property under slave codes, and literacy was restricted because reading opened the door to thought, resistance, and freedom. Religion in slaveholding culture was often used to justify obedience and bondage while people were denied the right to fully know, question, or interpret truth for themselves. Frederick Douglass drew a sharp line between the teachings of Christ and the slaveholding religion of his time.
There’s real significance here.
A historical backbone sits under this conversation, not just emotion.
I am not here to mock anyone’s faith, nor am I dismissing what religion has meant in many of our homes and communities.
For a lot of people, it gave strength and structure. It brought something to hold onto when everything else was chaotic and brutal. I respect that.
Respect does not mean every part of it gets a free pass.
Something may help people survive and still deserve a second look. That’s where I’m at. What carried somebody through one season is not automatically supposed to go untouched forever, especially when it keeps people cut off from their own center.
I hear spiritual language coming from people who are disconnected from their own clarity.
I watch people speak as if what is sacred has nothing to do with them.
I see people invest in the appearance of holiness while losing contact with their own life.
This is what I’m talking about.
What is devotion worth if it never deepens someone’s relationship with the life inside them?
What is the point of all that praying, reading, praising, and pleading if a person still walks through the world feeling empty, powerless, and separated from what is true?
Those questions need answers.
For our people, the weight is even heavier, since slavery did not only steal labor. It got into self-concept. It affected imagination. It tampered with identity. Messages were planted about worth, authority, leadership, truth, and who was expected to stay on their knees praying.
Damage like that does not disappear.
It turns up in sermons, in family language, and in the way suffering gets explained.
You hear it when brilliant people speak about themselves like they are less than what they are.
You see it when somebody keeps reaching outward while their own power stays right there, unused.
So no, I cannot look at slavery as only a physical system from the past.
Its psychological residue is still here.
The spiritual residue from it is still here.
Even with all of that, I do not believe the core was ever lost.
Covered over and redirected, yes.
But gone? No.
Worth existed before society had a chance to interfere.
Long before the world judged you, life was already moving through you.
What is holy in somebody does not come from systems, and for that reason systems can never fully own it.
That is why I am here to be the plot twist.
Agreement is not what I’m after. And attention sure ain’t it.
I’m here because way too many beautiful souls have been taught to live at a distance from themselves, and that distance has cost us more than we realize.
Inherited ideas need examination.
Certain teachings deserve questioning.
A lot was passed down sounding righteous, while the outcome was fear, dependence, and the loss of self.
This is not about tearing everything down. This is about honesty and taking a clear look at what all of this is producing.
For me, this history goes far beyond dates and events. I’m looking at what it left behind in people’s minds and lives.
That is why this conversation reaches far beyond one month on a calendar.
This touches belief, inherited patterns, and the way self-perception gets formed.
So yes, harder questions need to be asked.
How much of what was planted under oppression are we still calling truth?
These are the kinds of questions some people have carried quietly for years, feeling something deep inside without always knowing where to put it.
I want to remind you…
The divine lives within you. Life is now. Peace is not on the other side of death. Freedom begins with honesty, and healing is coming back to what was always there.
If this does not line up with what you believe, I respect that. I’m not here to force anything on anybody. I’m here to speak what life, spirit, and inner truth have made clear to me. Take what resonates, ask what needs to be asked, and think for yourself.
May the wisdom within guide you, the freedom within carry you, and the love within remind you… it is already done.
—Renee
Transmitter of pain into power
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