Infusing “Wellness Con Cultura” into Healing with Jennifer Velasquez
Season 3, Episode 26, Feb 20, 06:00 AM
Welcome to Talking to Grandma, a weekly podcast that elevates stories, science, and strategies to help you raise and teach multilingual and bilingual children. Hosted by Dr. Veronica Benavides, founder and CEO of Bilingual Generation, an organization that helps children with bilingualism in their bones stay connected to their heritage languages and cultures.
In this episode, we explore the vital connection between culture, language, and wellness with Jennifer Velasquez.
Jennifer Velasquez is an illustrator and the founder of Almadé, a wellness company that provides BIPOC women with the tools to heal their inner child and break free from their generational curses. Using her background in adult education and love of neuroscience, Jennifer’s science-based and abuela-approved tools are used by therapists, social workers, and in classrooms across the country. She creates in the Catskill Mountains of New York with her husband Jake and pup Ruthie. For more on her work visit, www.almadeshop.com and connect with her on Instagram @almadeshop.
Join us as she shares how her health led her to discover a side to her heritage language she had yet to uncover and how she plans to bridge generations through her work.
In this episode, we explore the vital connection between culture, language, and wellness with Jennifer Velasquez.
Jennifer Velasquez is an illustrator and the founder of Almadé, a wellness company that provides BIPOC women with the tools to heal their inner child and break free from their generational curses. Using her background in adult education and love of neuroscience, Jennifer’s science-based and abuela-approved tools are used by therapists, social workers, and in classrooms across the country. She creates in the Catskill Mountains of New York with her husband Jake and pup Ruthie. For more on her work visit, www.almadeshop.com and connect with her on Instagram @almadeshop.
Join us as she shares how her health led her to discover a side to her heritage language she had yet to uncover and how she plans to bridge generations through her work.