Shameless Reinvention

The Roads We Walk: How One Woman’s Quiet Power Changed Everything, A Conversation with Ms. Velma Monteiro-Tribble

45 min · 22 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio The Roads We Walk: How One Woman’s Quiet Power Changed Everything, A Conversation with Ms. Velma Monteiro-Tribble

Descripción

What does it mean to walk the work forward? In this episode of Shameless Reinvention, Sharon and Sonya sit down with the remarkable Ms. Velma Monteiro-Tribble, a global philanthropist, connector, and bridge builder who has spent decades quietly changing the world, from funding women entrepreneurs in post-genocide Rwanda to organizing a 66-person cultural exchange to the Equal Justice Initiative Legacy Sites in Montgomery and the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma during the 60th jubilee of Bloody Sunday. Velma shares the African proverbs her father used to teach her, why she believes brokenness is the beginning of humanity, and what moved her to tears in the written reflections of the young women she brought on that historic trip. She talks about being the spark rather than the answer, leading without ego, and the moment in a Beijing conference room that changed how she would lead forever. This is a conversation about legacy, love, and the courage it takes to keep walking the work forward. And yes, we end with a truth bomb that will stay with you. Do not miss this one. And if you missed Part One with the extraordinary Dr. Johnetta Betsch Cole, go back and listen first.

Comentarios

0

Sé la primera persona en comentar

¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de Shameless Reinvention!

Prueba gratis

Empieza 7 días de prueba

$99 / mes después de la prueba. · Cancela cuando quieras.

  • Podcasts solo en Podimo
  • 20 horas de audiolibros al mes
  • Podcast gratuitos

Todos los episodios

36 episodios

episode Who Are We Becoming? | America at 250 and the Reinvention We Can't Afford to Miss artwork

Who Are We Becoming? | America at 250 and the Reinvention We Can't Afford to Miss

Last week the Obama Presidential Center opened in Chicago, and if you were anywhere near social media you felt it. Michelle Obama told a room, and a nation, that hope is not a feeling. It is a choice. And Barack stood up in front of the world and refused to sugarcoat the moment, calling people toward honesty, community, and the hard work of becoming something better. That is the America 250 conversation almost nobody else is having. And it is exactly where Shameless Reinvention lives. In this episode Sharon and Sonya make the case that America's 250th birthday is not just a party. It is a mirror. And the question it is asking every single one of us is the same question reinvention always asks: Are you willing to look honestly at where you have been, do the real work of where you are, and choose, intentionally, who you are becoming? The framework is not complicated. Who were we. Who are we. Who are we becoming. It belongs to a woman rebuilding after a layoff, and it belongs to a nation turning 250. The messy middle looks the same either way. Plus, Sharon and Sonya each drop a Truth Bomb. One is deeply personal. One is the thing nobody wants to say at the cookout. Both are necessary. Topics covered in this episode: * Why thousands of organizations will tell America's backward-looking story and almost none will ask who we are becoming * The Juneteenth and America 250 tension that requires us to hold the miracle and the mess at the same time * Why uncertainty is not a malfunction, it is the process * Community as load-bearing infrastructure for reinvention * Hope as discipline, not mood Shameless Reinvention is the podcast for women who are done performing their lives and ready to build the next one. New episodes every Friday.

Ayer32 min
episode They Left Us Out of the Textbooks, SO SHE REWROTE THE RULES | A conversation with Dr. Chesahna Kindred artwork

They Left Us Out of the Textbooks, SO SHE REWROTE THE RULES | A conversation with Dr. Chesahna Kindred

What happens when your medical career path takes you through a crowded ER, a temporary practice out of a church lobby, and straight into a healthcare revolution? You do not wait for an invitation. You rewrite the entire game. In this episode of Shameless Reinvention, Sonya and Sharon sit down with the brilliant, powerhouse board-certified dermatologist, researcher, and author, Dr. Chesahna Kindred. Dr. Kindred shares her jaw-dropping journey from finding her spark watching The Cosby Show in South Central LA to navigating the massive disparities in dermatology for Black and brown patients. She breaks down how she and Susan Peterkin built STRAND (Stylists Training, Researching, and Networking with Dermatologists), the country’s very first dermatologic practice with an integrated hair salon, bridging the gap between medical science and the stylist's chair. Tune in for a masterclass on legacy, stepping out of your comfort zone, and why "there is enough for all of us to win." Key Takeaways from This Episode: * The Turning Point: The exact moment a stranger opened a closed ER door for 19-year-old Chesahna, changing her path forever. * The STRAND Network: How stylists and dermatologists are partnering to save Black hair and address crucial scalp health disparities. * Unapologetically Real: Why Dr. Kindred is entirely done performing for audiences that are not hers and how she prioritizes her faith, family, and mentees. * The 10-Month Church Detour: The wild, inspiring story of fighting a major bank and running her entire medical practice out of a church lobby without losing a single patient. 👉 Listen now on Podbean or your favorite podcast platform!  #ShamelessReinvention #DrChesahnaKindred #Dermatology #StrandNetwork #BlackWomenInMedicine #LiftAsYouClimb #RewritingTheRules

19 de jun de 202647 min
episode The Roads We Walk: They Walked Into History: Ava, Alayna, Bella and Mae artwork

The Roads We Walk: They Walked Into History: Ava, Alayna, Bella and Mae

In Episode 4 of The Roads We Walk miniseries, Sharon LaSure-Roy and Sonya Seymour welcome four extraordinary young women — Ava, Alayna, Bella, and Mae — who traveled to the Equal Justice Initiative legacy sites in Montgomery, Alabama, and across the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma alongside community leader Ms. Velma Monteiro-Tribble. These young women came home and wrote reflections that moved us to our core. In this conversation, they open up about what it felt like to walk through the Legacy Museum, what Bryan Stevenson said over dinner that they're still thinking about, and how this trip didn't just educate them — it transformed them into advocates. From Ava's word "numinous" to Mae's quiet courage in the face of a swastika drawn in her classroom, this episode is full of moments that remind you exactly why this generation gives us hope. They close with Truth Bombs on justice, womanhood, and the responsibility of history — and a playlist that will stay with you long after the episode ends. If you haven't listened to Episodes 1, 2, or 3 of this miniseries featuring Dr. Johnnetta Betsch Cole and Ms. Velma Monteiro-Tribble, go back and start from the beginning. This series is one for the ages. Shameless Reinvention — because the best is yet to come.

5 de jun de 202626 min
episode The Roads We Walk: They Walked Into History and Felt It - Part 1 artwork

The Roads We Walk: They Walked Into History and Felt It - Part 1

They are not waiting. They are not asking permission. They are already doing it big. In this episode of Shameless Reinvention, Sharon LaSure-Roy and Sonya Seymour sit down with Chase, Ella, and Nyana, three young women who traveled to the Equal Justice Initiative legacy sites in Montgomery, Alabama and the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma as part of an extraordinary intergenerational journey led by the remarkable Ms. Velma Monteiro Tribble and the incomparable Dr. Johnnetta Betsch Cole. What they saw, felt, and carried home will move you. They stood in the silence of the Legacy Museum. They looked at things that were hard to look at. They held each other up. And then they came home and wrote about it in a way that stopped us completely in our tracks. In this conversation, Chase, Ella, and Nyana share what it means to speak when silence is no longer acceptable, what Bryan Stevenson said that they will never forget, and how an immersive encounter with history changed the way they move through the world. They talk about broken people helping broken people, the power of community, and the weight of truth when you see it with your own eyes instead of reading it on a page. This is Episode 3 of The Roads We Walk miniseries. If you have not listened to Episodes 1 and 2 yet, go back and start from the beginning. You will not regret it

29 de may de 202639 min
episode The Roads We Walk: How One Woman’s Quiet Power Changed Everything, A Conversation with Ms. Velma Monteiro-Tribble artwork

The Roads We Walk: How One Woman’s Quiet Power Changed Everything, A Conversation with Ms. Velma Monteiro-Tribble

What does it mean to walk the work forward? In this episode of Shameless Reinvention, Sharon and Sonya sit down with the remarkable Ms. Velma Monteiro-Tribble, a global philanthropist, connector, and bridge builder who has spent decades quietly changing the world, from funding women entrepreneurs in post-genocide Rwanda to organizing a 66-person cultural exchange to the Equal Justice Initiative Legacy Sites in Montgomery and the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma during the 60th jubilee of Bloody Sunday. Velma shares the African proverbs her father used to teach her, why she believes brokenness is the beginning of humanity, and what moved her to tears in the written reflections of the young women she brought on that historic trip. She talks about being the spark rather than the answer, leading without ego, and the moment in a Beijing conference room that changed how she would lead forever. This is a conversation about legacy, love, and the courage it takes to keep walking the work forward. And yes, we end with a truth bomb that will stay with you. Do not miss this one. And if you missed Part One with the extraordinary Dr. Johnetta Betsch Cole, go back and listen first.

22 de may de 202645 min