In this episode of Interrupting Business As Usual, Nikki explores the hidden history and present-day reality of labor extraction from Black women and femmes. From chattel slavery and domestic labor to corporate emotional labor, DEI work, workplace culture repair, and community caretaking, this episode examines the ways Black women's labor has always been treated as essential while simultaneously being undervalued, undercompensated, and overextracted. This conversation asks us to confront difficult questions: Who has America historically depended on to hold everything together? What does freedom mean without economic autonomy? Why are Black women so often expected to provide emotional labor, care work, and social stabilization? What does liberation require beyond symbolic inclusion? How do we build communities that don't depend on Black women's overfunctioning? In This Episode, You'll Learn: The connection between Juneteenth, economic autonomy, and freedom How Black women's labor has been extracted across generations The hidden relationship between convenience culture and the loss of access to Black women's labor Why emotional labor is labor What workplace emotional labor and "glass cliff" leadership look like The role Black women play as social stabilizers inside organizations and communities Why collective care requires collective responsibility How labor extraction impacts everyone, not just Black women Practical ways to interrupt your dependence on Black women's labor Why reparations remain a critical economic justice issue The difference between symbolic support and material redistribution How collective liberation requires economic imagination and action Mentioned in This Episode Episode 61: Black Businesses Are a Revolution Episode 9: Interrupting Relying on the Labor of Black Women Episode 59: Interrupting White Lady Money Advice featuring Monique Melton Special thanks to Def Sound for providing the theme for Interrupting Business As Usual. Where do we go from here? To learn more about what you heard on the podcast today, visit nikkiblak.com. TAP HERE to subscribe to the free weekly email series Resourcing a Revolution for more exclusive content Follow Nikki on IG: @nikkiblak Work With Nikki If this conversation challenged the way you think about labor, care, burnout, overfunctioning, liberation, capitalism, motherhood, or your relationship to work and worth, applications for 1:1 coaching are open. Through an intersectional feminist lens, Nikki helps women and femmes examine the systems shaping their lives, relationships, work, money, ambition, caregiving, and self-worth so they can build lives rooted in liberation, not extraction. TAP HERE to apply. Next Episode Why Motherhood Feels Impossible Right Now: Mental Load, Invisible Labor, and Economic Anxiety If Black women have historically existed at the intersection of labor, care, survival, and extraction, then we also need to tell the truth about motherhood itself. In the next episode, we're unpacking maternal labor, the invisible work mothers perform every single day to keep households, schools, workplaces, relationships, and entire communities functioning. We'll explore the labor of remembering, anticipating, caregiving, emotional regulation, and preventing calamity before anyone else even realizes something could go wrong.