Lifestyle & Wellness

Black Girls Breathing Breathwork Community Creates a Safe Space for Black Women


Jasmine Marie is the founder of Black Girls Breathing—an Atlanta-based community that encourages Black women to nurture their mental, emotional, and spiritual health through meditational breathwork. Here, in her own words, Jasmine shares how she’s leading her business during the pandemic, the importance of preserving Black women’s mental health—including her own—amid COVID-19, and the systemic racism our country continues to face.

When I graduated from New York University (NYU), I was working at a consumer products goods company in global haircare. The beauty world can be crazy. It was in that time of extreme stress and pressure that I was introduced to breathwork. I went to a very non-traditional church, First Corinthian Baptist Church in Harlem, and my pastor had a personal breathworker. When the community center at the church was finally launched, breathwork was one of the free classes they offered to the community. I started going, and I was doing that for about four-and-a-half years before I decided to get trained so I could teach it. I created the concept for Black Girls Breathing in October 2018, and I finished the training in November 2018. I was just waiting to get my group training so I could officially launch everything.





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