Articles
YOGA-SCIENCE FOR LIFE MASTERY
4 MINUTE READ by Shanthi Yogini What does it mean to take charge of your life? To answer this, ask yourself a simple question – What is the driving force for all your activities? Why do you do all that […]
WHERE AM I FROM? Cultural fluency through a child’s book.
1 MINUTE READ Author Elisavet Arkolaki and her family are from everywhere. Passionate about travel and inspired by global learning, she raises her children in-between countries, cultures and languages. She writes to build cultural understanding and sensitivity in young children […]
OF TRADITION, FOOD AND CULTURE. Bridging Cultures with food & customs.
An Adult Third Culture Kid and International Adoptee Shares how her Swedish Family Instilled a Strong Sense of Identity. 6 MINUTE READ by Anna Svedberg Growing up as a Third Culture Kid can be complicated enough, navigating different cultures and […]
THE SUNDANCE EXPERIENCE- Filmmakers find more diversity and inclusion at this year’s festival.
9 MINUTE READ by Rebekah E. Henderson This article is part of the Summer 2020 ” Time for Change”‘ print issue’s MUST LIST of shows to watch and songs to hear, artistry, shopping and things to explore, know, and do. […]
ANTI-RACISM & THIRD CULTURE SUPPORT RESOURCES
This document is intended to serve as a resource to white people and parents to deepen our anti-racism work. If you haven’t engaged in anti-racism work in the past, start now.
10 DAYS OF 10 THINGS People of Color Need You To Do:
We know, Janet Jackson and En Vogue told you to be color blind in the 90s, but we’ve learned that assimilation requires homogeny. We don’t want to assimilate. People of Color want to be seen, heard and celebrated for who we are.
HISTORY PRE-WRITTEN: TRANSGENERATIONAL TRANSFER OF TRAUMA, SYSTEMIC RACISM AND UNRESOLVED GRIEF.
At the tender age of seven, and before I even learned the language to name it, I had experienced the painful reality of racism.
Part VI of VI: What Blackness Looks Like- I WANT TO BREATHE:
As I reflect upon what it still means to be black, or a person of color in the United States of America (U.S.), I think about the sleepless nights I have experienced being concerned for my black and multiracial children (especially after we returned from living overseas).

















