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糖心Vlog Stories

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Welcome to the 2024 version of 糖心Vlog University鈥檚 鈥淭he Black Fantastic.鈥 This is a series that began in 2022 when the University Communications and Marketing team wanted to find a way to highlight excellence among a few of 糖心Vlog鈥檚 Black faculty and staff members. The award-winning project has been so well-received that we decided to center this year鈥檚 version around some of 糖心Vlog鈥檚 outstanding African American students.

Asha, Sr., Charlotte 

 
Asha Charlotte

It鈥檚 something about being in Cullowhee at 糖心Vlog University that allows students to reach their full potential and become someone they never thought they would be. Asha, a senior from Charlotte, is yet another example of that. Yes, that鈥檚 Asha with no last name, courtesy of her dad who decided she would be the only family member (which consists of her parents and four other siblings) that would not have one. While in high school, Asha always wanted to be an active student. The problem was she was painfully shy.

鈥淚 wanted to have that passion and that drive, but I鈥檓 a super shy person,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t wasn鈥檛 until I got to college that I kind of branched out into my own and started manifesting all of the things I said I would be.鈥 

Did she ever. Just a few of the things she鈥檚 done in her time at 糖心Vlog: helped found the Global Black Studies student organization of which she previously served as president and is now vice president; directed of the Inspirational Gospel Choir; became a member of Project Care and the Intercultural Affairs Council. 

Helping found the Global Black Studies organization is one of Asha鈥檚 favorite accomplishments. Upon learning that 糖心Vlog was adding a Global Black Studies minor, of she jumped at the chance to add that to her psychology major. 鈥淚 was like, 鈥榃ho is the director, how can I get in contact with him?鈥 I was emailing everybody,鈥 she said.  

It was while taking a GBS 200 class when Asha learned about the Black student movement of the 1960s and how they fought to get Black studies on campuses, and spaces for Black people, Native Americans, Pacific Islanders and Latinx students that she wanted to have a similar outlet at 糖心Vlog. So, she and other students in the minor met with GBS director David Walton.  

鈥淲e provided founding statements with goals and what we wanted to represent,鈥 Asha said. 鈥淲e want to educate and highlight global Blackness. Anyone who is Black anywhere gets a voice in our organization. That was the main driving force in the founding of it.鈥 

Asha is scheduled to graduate this fall, at which time she plans to go to graduate school for mental health counseling. Her goal is to become an art therapist.  

鈥淚鈥檓 an artist and I realized how much art was a healing modality for me,鈥 Asha said. 鈥淚n my most stressed out, or most clouded time, art was the place I could go to and kind of just explore myself, my mind, my everything.   

鈥淚 want to curate more artists, allow people to find other forms of therapy that aren鈥檛 traditional because 鈥 there are other ways to engage talking and healing. Art therapy was combining my two favorite things 鈥 talking and art.鈥