Someday is Here

Vivian Mabuni

A podcast created for Asian American & Pacific Islander women on leadership and culture. I’ve wanted to carve out a space for AAPI women to explore and validate living in both Eastern and Western worlds. Each week we will celebrate our heritage and highlight our history as we explore our AAPI journeys, parts that we are proud of and those of pain.

  1. 05/09/2023

    S5 E2: The Role of the Adoptive Parent with Shannan Martin

    This Someday is Here series is sponsored by Denver Seminary. To learn more about Denver Seminary’s programs and community, visit DenverSeminary.edu/VIVIAN. Today is the second episode of our AAPI Adoption Series! Today’s episode is a both challenging and hopeful conversation as Shannan Martin joins me to discuss the impact of adoption on her life as an adoptive parent. Shannan is an author, speaker, and cook at a local non-profit. Most recently, Shannan has released her newest book, Start With Hello, about what it looks like to live a connected life in a community.  Shannan shares her experience as an adoptive parent of children from varying ethnic and cultural backgrounds. We discuss parental tips on assisting your children as they process, heal, and embrace the person that God has made them to be. This is not a conversation you want to miss! If you haven’t heard the first episode in this adoption series I encourage you to also go back and listen to Sandhya Oaks to learn about her own personal experience with adoption as a transracial adoptee! Complete our listener survey! Resources: It Takes More than Love: A Christian Guide to Navigating the Complexities of Cross-Cultural  Shannan’s books: Start with Hello: (And Other Simple Ways to Live as Neighbors) The Ministry of Ordinary Places Falling Free Connect with Vivian: Instagram: @vivmabuni Website: https://www.vivianmabuni.com/ Connect with Shannan: Instagram: @shannanwrites Twitter: @shannanwrites Newsletter: https://www.shannanmartin.com/newsletter Website: https://www.shannanmartin.com/

    48 min
  2. 05/02/2023

    S5 E1: The Adoption Table with Sandhya Oaks

    Happy AAPI Month!  This Someday is Here series is sponsored by Denver Seminary. To learn more about Denver Seminary’s programs and community, visit DenverSeminary.edu/VIVIAN. Are you curious about the impact of adoption? Maybe you are a transracial adoptee seeking to be heard? Or an adoptive parent wanting to advocate and support your adoptive child? Then you will love this conversation with Sandhya Oaks. Sandhya is a ministry leader, story coach, and spiritual director who has witnessed firsthand the impact of adoption through her own story as a transracial adoptee. Sandhya has also co-founded The Adoption Table which is a group connecting everyone involved in the adoption or foster care process.  In our conversation, Sandhya shares her own story processing her background in an abusive adoptive household and describes her journey to empowerment. We reflect and discuss helpful tactics for parents wanting to lovingly and effectively help their child embrace their ethnic background. Whether you are an adoptee, adoptive parent, considering adoption, or just curious- this is a conversation you will not want to miss! Complete our listener survey! Resources: All You Can Ever Know: A Memoir It Takes More than Love: A Christian Guide to Navigating the Complexities of Cross-Cultural Adoption Therapy Services The Adoption Table Equipping Resources Workshops with Sandhya Connect with Vivian: Instagram: @vivmabuni Website: https://www.vivianmabuni.com/ Connect with Sandhya: Instagram: @sandhyaoaks Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/sandhyaoaks Website: https://www.sandhyaoaks.com/

    37 min
  3. 03/07/2023

    Episode 9: Women Wise Nutrition with Isabel Garza

    We all do it: step on the scale, look in the mirror, wish something about our body was different. Loving one’s body isn’t always easy, but is it possible to break that way of thinking and feel at home in your own skin? Join us this week as Registered Dietitian Isabel Garza shares how we can nourish our bodies with confidence and clarity!  Show Notes: Women Wise Nutrition Connect with Vivian: Instagram: @somedayisherepodcast and @vivmabuni  Website: https://www.vivianmabuni.com/ Connect with Isabel: Instagram: @womanwisenutrition Website: www.womanwisenutrition.com Did You Know Segment: Rohwer Relocation Center Memorial Cemetery in Desha County, Arkansas, is one of only three extant Japanese American confinement site cemeteries in the US? In 1992, it was designated a National Historic Landmark. Executive Order 9066 signed by President Roosevelt in 1942 authorized the US Military to forcibly remove Japanese Americans and those of Japanese ancestry from the West Coast. Rohwer was one of only two confinement sites located in the eastern half of the US. Over two thirds of its 10,000 incarcerees were American citizens. From this group, volunteers enlisted in the US Army and fought with the 442nd Regimental Combat Team, one of the most highly decorated and respected military units.  Japanese Americans incarcerated at Rohwer from 1942 to 1945 designed and built the cemetery which sat on 500 acres of farmland.   In a 1982 dedication, a granite monument was erected to commemorate both the incarcerees who died at Rohwer and those who died while serving in World War 2.  SOURCE: U.S. National Park Service, “Rohwer Relocation Center Memorial Cemetery,https://www.nps.gov/places/rohwer-relocation-center-memorial-cemetery.htm

    45 min
  4. 02/28/2023

    Episode 8: Voices of Lament with Kathy Khang and Grace Cho

    In 2020, in the middle of a worldwide pandemic, 29 women of color worked together to bring words to the lament that was felt across the world. As they reflected on Psalm 37,  these women wrote on topics of justice, anger, generosity, and peace, and showed the world the beauty and strength that comes from community. Join us this week as contributing authors Vivian Mabuni, Kathy Khang, and Grace Cho share their experience in writing Voices of Lament and how hope and healing can be found through grief.  Show Notes: Voices of Lament: Reflections on Brokenness and Hope in a World Longing for Justice Connect with Vivian: Instagram: @somedayisherepodcast and @vivmabuni  Website: https://www.vivianmabuni.com/ Connect with Kathy Khang: Instagram: @mskathykhang Twitter: @mskathyKhang Connect with Grace Cho: Instagram: @gracepcho Twitter: @gracepcho Website: www.gracepcho.com Did You Know Segment: Scout Bassett is an elite sprinter, triathlete, Paralympian and UCLA graduate? Who is she? Scout became the fastest American of her classification ever to run the 100-meter dash for the US. (1) And, she teamed with American Girl to have a doll created after her. (2) Scout lost her leg in a chemical fire as a baby in China. As a seven-year old, she was adopted from a Chinese orphanage by an American family. (3)  She grew up in a predominantly white town in Michigan and had no friends or role models who looked like her or had a disability like hers. (4)  However, her most painful life experience occurred during the pandemic when Scout faced overt racism at a local grocery store. (5) She used that event to not only fuel her athletic goals but also to become a voice and role model for other Asian Americans. In her words, “Representation really does matter,… (w)e cannot aspire to the things that we want to be or that we don’t even know we might want to until we see someone else doing it.” (6) SOURCES Brooke Baldwin, Huddle, How Women Unlock Their Collective Power (Harper Collins, 2021), 121.Ibid, 122.Ibid, 121.4-6) Sara Tan, “Full Speed Ahead, How Paralympian Scout Bassett Uses Her Sport to Find Strength in the Face of Xenophobia, June 11,2020, https://www.allure.com/story/scout-bassett-paralympics-runner-asian-american-xenophobia-interview https://www.challengedathletes.org/athletes/scout-bassett-2/

    47 min
4.9
out of 5
109 Ratings

About

A podcast created for Asian American & Pacific Islander women on leadership and culture. I’ve wanted to carve out a space for AAPI women to explore and validate living in both Eastern and Western worlds. Each week we will celebrate our heritage and highlight our history as we explore our AAPI journeys, parts that we are proud of and those of pain.