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Life & Work with Nicole Telfer of Mount Vernon, Baltimore City

 

Today we’d like to introduce you to Nicole Telfer

Hi Nicole, can you start by introducing yourself? We’d love to learn more about how you got to where you are today?
I have always been a community-oriented person and I thank my parents for that. I grew up in a Black Caribbean household that valued collectivism and village-mindedness. My mom is from Thornton District, St. Elizabeth, Jamaica and if you ever visit that particular area, you will see that everyone knows everyone. Everyone helps everyone. Everyone’s a family. If an elder passes away, everyone in Thornton district shows up in love and full support. I’m so glad that village and community mindset was instilled in me. Fast forwarding a bit– One day, during a writing seminar held in Baltimore while I was in graduate school, we were encouraged by the facilitators to look up the meaning of our names. I hadn’t given much thought to what my name would mean because I have a very basic, Westernized name. However, when I discovered my name’s meaning, it was as if my life’s purpose and calling all made sense. Nicole means “The People’s Victory,” and many folks who know me well would say that it is very fitting. I love organizing. I love gathering folks to be in unity and community with one another. This started as early as high school in Brooklyn, NY, and as recent as graduate school here in Baltimore, MD. At the University of Maryland, Baltimore County (UMBC), I founded the first Black Graduate Student Organization in the institution’s 54-year history. I recognized that I and other Black graduate students were in need of crucial resources and support and created a space where we can receive that. And it warms my heart to know that the BGSO is still active to this day. There’s one particular annual event the the organization’s hosts and that is an Ebony Ball where we highlight and honor Black students, faculty, and staff, as well as Black owned businesses in the area. Some reputable Black-owned businesses that we have awarded with a plaque are “Poets for Dinner,” “Drama Mama Book Shop,” and “God’s Creations.” We have also had amazing guest speakers like Sybrina Fulton, the mother of Trayvon Martin, and American Politician and wife of the late Elijah Cummings, Dr. Maya Rockeymoore Cummings.

My drive to create community among folks who have often been excluded in various spaces also motivated me to gather Black women doctors (and soon-to-be doctors) to share their experiences in a memoir. The first edition was published in 2022 and is entitled, “Our Doctoral Journey: A Collection of Black Women’s Experiences.” The second edition is currently in the works, and I am excited to work with brilliant womxn across the world and across disciplines. What’s been so exciting about gathering these womxn are that they are from across the world and despite being in different geographical locations, the experiences have been quite similar.

In addition to creating community, I also take pride in being a mentor to young people. In 2021, I had the honor of serving as a mentor to about 50 high school girls who were seniors at the time at the Baltimore Leadership School for Young Women. In my role, I gave various presentations related to research and preparation for college. I was also a mentor through Assist Our Kids (A-OK) in Columbia, MD, where I met one-on-one with Black and Brown elementary school-aged youth. Currently, I am a mentor through Lumiere, which is a research program housed in England, and I am mentor to an amazing high school student who lives in Peru.

I also just want to share that I am a highly motivated scholar who is committed to justice and liberation on behalf of my community. I earned my doctorate at 25 years old and recently received my first big grant of $227,235 to conduct a study highlighting the strengths of Black families of children with disabilities. I have been a recipient of many awards, one which is called “The Way Paver’s Award” from Penn State. The person who introduced me as the recipient of that award referred to me as a “silent way paver,” which spoke volumes to me. I am not one to boast or share with folks what I have done for recognition. When I intentionally create space, it is to foster community and inclusivity.

Continuing on the path of community, leadership, and mentorship, I founded a small consulting business called “Justice and Liberation Consulting, LLC” based in Baltimore, MD. With a collective mission to help expand diverse organizations, we are committed to providing high quality consulting that incorporates the principles of diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI). In a rapidly evolving global landscape, embracing diversity, ensuring equity, and fostering inclusion are not just moral imperatives but also essential components of a thriving and innovative organization.

As you probably can tell, “liberation” is a word that is in my vocabulary bank everyday. There are two quotes that I live by and exemplify in my work and day-to-day experiences:

 

“Nobody’s free until everybody’s free” by Fannie Lou Hamer and “The function of freedom is to free someone else” by Toni Morrison.
These quotes are so critical and eye-opening because once we read and study and converse, we will realize that the same systems are oppressing all of us, nationally and globally. It is the same systems that are causing, funding, and influencing the ongoing genocide happening in Palestine, the Republic of Congo, Sudan, and so on. You know, it’s all intertwined and connected, which is why community, collectivism, and togetherness is so crucial in this liberation movement. And so every day, I am actively thinking about how I can move us towards liberation, even if it means at the interpersonal level. So sharing knowledge and accurate information (e.g., books) with my loved ones, things like that. It feels like a God-given mission of mine and I always like to think that’s why I was named Nicole with the meaning, “the people’s victory.” I just want us all to be free.

Can you talk to us a bit about the challenges and lessons you’ve learned along the way. Looking back would you say it’s been easy or smooth in retrospect?
The road has truly been rocky. There were internal struggles, like imposter syndrome, as well as systemic and institutional barriers, particularly when I was in undergraduate and graduate school. When I wanted to establish the Black graduate student organization, I received lots of support but also received some pushback. I was told to focus on my academic journey to ensure that I don’t fall behind in courses and not to consider running an entire campus organization. I also faced struggles as a graduate student…feeling too young to even be in a doctoral program and earn a doctorate degree. I have encountered racist experiences from professors and disappointing messages from peers who did not think that I was even qualified to make it past the doctoral interview. Statements and encounters like those hurt, and definitely triggers impostor syndrome. Sometimes it feels like I face struggles and pushback to this day.because of my race, age, and gender. You know, the intersection of those things. And honestly, I think I will face struggles and pushback for the rest of my days because I am a Black woman living. I was going to say “living in America” but just living, period. I always try to remind myself that I come from proud and strong people and that there are so many Black women that came before me and left a blueprint. And because of this reminder, I persevered and will continue to. It does not mean that I am not exhausted nor am I glorifying my struggles. I strongly believe that Black women deserve to rest and live a life of ease & encountering those struggles made me value rest and stillness so much.

As you know, we’re big fans of you and your work. For our readers who might not be as familiar what can you tell them about what you do?
I am a writer. I have been writing since middle school and had my first poem published in the Library of Congress. I remember being so excited when my English teacher read my poem to the class. So, it is no surprise to me that I chose to earn my doctorate and conduct research because I view myself as a story teller, and researchers are storytellers. I am an applied developmental psychologist by training and currently work at the Child Development Institute at UNC Chapel Hill. As a researcher, I focus on parents’ ethnic-racial socialization practices, DEI initiatives in the educational outcomes of Black and Brown youth, neurodevelopmental disabilities, and the influence of socio-cultural factors on REM youth’s development. My storytelling comes out in the research that I do at my job, as well as in my writing and poetry. In 2018, I was selected to be part of the Penn State’s CUPSI team, which a poetry slam invitational and that year, we performed at Temple University in Philadelphia, PA. That experience was truly liberating and safe and gave me the confidence I needed to continue to pour into my art. In one of our bouts, I, along with two other women, wrote a poem on silence. We related to each other because we were all soft-spoken and relatively quiet people. And we wanted to explore that more as a collective. What about our life experiences made us find comfort in silence?

I think that poem birthed a poetry book out of me. I wanted to be free from my thoughts, trauma. From the pain of my childhood. In that same year, I published my first poetry book entitled, “Freed,” which covers a personal and vulnerable journey about abuse, healing, love, Blackness, and womanhood into three chapters. Freed also has a fourth chapter that invites five poets to share their amazing pieces. The poems in this book are intended to inspire others to share their story. Everyone has thoughts in their mind that are worth acknowledging. Freed speaks to the life experiences of various people from various backgrounds, but in the voice and story of a Black woman. I have received many testimonials from Black women and Women of Color thanking me for sharing my story and giving them the strength and power to share their own stories. It was hard to do because it felt like I was exposing myself and was definitely a next level of vulnerability that I hadn’t even considered before. But it was necessary. It brought healing, not only to me, but to my family, friends, and community. In the following years, I published two books related to my graduate school journey, “A Black Woman’s Guide to Earning a PhD” which was an Amazon bestseller for a couple of weeks, and “Our Doctoral Journey: A Collection of Black Women’s Experiences,” co-written with 24 Black women. I am excited to see where my writing takes me to next. I am excited to share more stories and help folks find their form of healing.

How do you think about happiness?
Sunlight makes me happy because I love its brightness and warmth. Having thriving plants makes me happy because green is one of my absolute favorite colors and the plants thriving speaks to my love and care, I believe. My nieces and nephews and God children make me happy because they have joyous and contagious spirits and remind me the importance of slowing down, taking deep breaths, and laughing and smiling whenever I can.

Pricing:

  • A Black Woman’s Guide to Earning a PhD: $14.69
  • Our Doctoral Journey: $16.69

Contact Info:

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