Interrupting Business As Usual

Nikki Blak

Interrupting Business as Usual is the weekly resource for folks who've awakened to oppression, injustice, and the b******t of the status quo and are looking for ways to live, work, parent, build, and lead in more subversive, disruptive, and liberated ways. We talk life, business, purpose, and liberation — for the newly aware and long-time interrupters alike. If you're ready to rise to your next level, as the most liberated version of yourself, you're in the right place. Let's interrupt business as usual.

  1. 2d ago

    Ep 81: Why Care Work Requires Wealth

    Every mother needs a million dollars. That's not a hot take, that's the math. In this episode, Nikki is breaking down the real, updated cost of raising a child and caring for aging parents in this economy, why caretakers are chronically under-resourced by design, and what it actually means to want wealth as a woman whose labor holds entire families and communities together. This is the brass tacks money conversation nobody in the personal finance space is having with a liberation lens. In this episode: What it actually costs to raise a child to adulthood in 2026 (the numbers will surprise you) The staggering financial toll of elder care and family caregiving on women's lifetime earnings Why the care crisis is a policy failure, not a personal one What it means to want a million dollars and still be in right relationship with your values 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 delivered right to your email inbox. 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 build businesses, careers, and lives that resource them instead of consuming them without replicating the systems they're trying to dismantle. TAP HERE to apply. Next episode: We'll be talking about money matrescence — how becoming responsible for another life literally rewires your brain around money, risk, and resource.

    37 min
  2. Jun 7

    Ep 80: The Mothering America Demands from Black Women: Labor, Liberation, and the Racialized Politics of Care

    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.

    44 min
  3. May 31

    Ep 79: Why Mothers are so Burned Out

    Women are expected to absorb the failures of society while rarely benefiting from the systems they hold together and we've been conditioned to call that love. We call it motherhood, sacrifice, and "doing what needs to be done." But what we rarely call it is labor. In this episode of Interrupting Business As Usual, Nikki unpacks the hidden economic reality beneath modern motherhood, caregiving, emotional labor, and burnout under capitalism. From maternal hypervigilance and invisible labor to nervous system exhaustion and societal overburdening, this conversation explores why so many mothers are overwhelmed and what we can do about it. This episode explores: Maternal burnout and nervous system exhaustion Emotional labor and invisible labor Motherhood under capitalism Why care work is real labor The mental load mothers carry Privatized care and collective care Hypervigilance and overfunctioning in women Feminized labor and economic extraction Why mothers are blamed for systemic failures Attachment theory, caregiving, and emotional regulation The relationship between capitalism and motherhood Why women are expected to "hold everything together" The socialization of girls into caregiving Burnout culture, parenting pressure, and maternal responsibility This episode also reflects on: Tressie McMillan Cottom's insights about vaccine hesitancy and maternal pressure Growing up as the child of a disabled single Black mother Caretaking identities formed through survival Why women are taught to normalize self-abandonment The cultural lie that support makes people weak Why capitalism depends on women overfunctioning If you've ever felt: emotionally exhausted hyper-responsible trapped in survival mode overwhelmed by caregiving burdened by everyone else's needs unable to rest without guilt …this episode is going to hit home. 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 me on IG: @nikkiblak Work With Nikki If this episode has you feeling activated around burnout, motherhood, labor, work, worthiness, care, ambition, money, or liberation, applications for Nikki's private 1:1 coaching are now open. Nikki's work integrates: intersectional feminism liberatory life coaching nervous system awareness career and business mentorship anti-capitalist and anti-oppressive frameworks TAP HERE to apply. Next Episode: Black Women and the Economics of Liberation A Juneteenth-adjacent conversation about labor, ownership, survival, economic extraction, and what freedom actually means in a society built on Black labor.

    28 min
  4. May 24

    Ep 78: We Can't Have Matriarchy without Community

    Everybody keeps saying they want matriarchy, but few folks want to do the work to actually be in community. In this episode of Interrupting Business As Usual, Nikki unpacks why rugged individualism is fundamentally incompatible with liberation, collective care, and matriarchy. From settler colonialism and capitalism to the myth of "single motherhood," this conversation explores how hyper-independence has fractured our relationships, isolated mothers, and normalized burnout as a way of life. This episode dives deep into: Rugged individualism and capitalism Why community is essential for liberation Matriarchy and collective care The social construction of "single motherhood" Black collectivist traditions and survival strategies Attachment parenting and emotional security Why support does NOT make people weak Community, interdependence, and mutual aid Burnout, isolation, and nervous system awareness Why capitalism benefits from disconnected people If you've ever felt exhausted trying to survive everything alone… If you've struggled to trust community… If you've been taught that needing support is weakness… This episode is for you. Mentioned in this episode: Finding Your People: From Sociopolitical Isolation to Collective Action. TAP HERE to start finding your people. Episode 27: What We Get Wrong About Community. TAP HERE to listen. Episode 69: Why White Women Are So Politically Isolated. TAP HERE to listen. 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 work privately with Nikki TAP HERE to subscribe to the free weekly email series Resourcing a Revolution for more exclusive content Follow Nikki on IG: @nikkiblak

    48 min
  5. May 17

    Ep 77: How Do We Achieve Matriarchy? Healing Beyond Whiteness and Toward Collective Liberation with Myisha T. Hill

    Matriarchy is not simply women occupying positions of power inside the same violent systems. It is a complete reimagining of how we relate to ourselves, one another, the Earth, healing, care, accountability, and collective survival. In the final installment of this series on matriarchy, Nikki sits down with educator, author, and healing justice practitioner Myisha T. Hill for a profound conversation about what it would actually take to co-create a matriarchal society. Together, they explore why liberation cannot be achieved through intellectual understanding alone and why healing - especially healing beyond whiteness, hierarchy, patriarchy, and codependency - is essential to collective liberation. This conversation dives deep into: Whiteness as erasure Somatics and nervous system healing The difference between codependency and interdependence Ancestor work and healing historical wounds Why white feminism cannot create matriarchy Black feminist and Indigenous understandings of care Healing justice as liberatory practice Embodiment, praxis, and living the work IRL Collective liberation and the future we must learn to co-create together Myisha also shares insights from her groundbreaking book Heal Your Way Forward and discusses why so many people attempt liberation work without first doing the internal healing required to sustain it. If Episodes 75 and 76 asked us to rethink power and democracy, this conversation asks us something even deeper: Who must we become to make matriarchy possible? TAP HERE to connect with Myisha T. Hill, learn more about her Joy Is the Revolution Tour, and get a copy of her book Heal Your Way Forward: The Co-Conspirator's Guide to an Antiracist Future. 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 work privately with Nikki TAP HERE to subscribe to the free weekly email series Resourcing a Revolution for more exclusive content Follow Nikki on IG: @nikkiblak

    52 min
  6. May 10

    Ep 76: How to Save Democracy with Matriarchy: Healing Historical Wounds and Practicing Care Without Control with Crystal Tennille Irby

    What would it actually take to save democracy? And what if the answer isn't more control, more domination, or simply replacing men with women in positions of power? In this episode of Interrupting Business as Usual, Nikki sits down with writer, podcaster, birth worker, and creative visionary Crystal Tennille Irby for a conversation about matriarchy, collective care, Black motherhood, and what it means to build a society rooted in care instead of control. As gender-based violence, authoritarianism, and political instability continue escalating across the United States, more people are calling for matriarchy as an alternative to patriarchy. But what do people actually mean when they say "matriarchy"? And are we truly prepared for the kind of transformation a matriarchal society would require? Together, Crystal and Nikki explore: Why matriarchy is not simply "women in power" How patriarchy distorts our understanding of power Collective care, motherhood, and community responsibility What the historical wounds of chattel slavery have to do with our inability to build a matriarchal society The importance of liberatory imagination, creativity, and dreaming Why democracy cannot survive without a radically different relationship to care, power, and community This conversation also examines the role of Black women in political resistance movements, the South as both a historical wound and a site of liberation, and the ways liberal feminism often reproduces patriarchal ideas about power and domination. More than a conversation about matriarchy, this episode is an invitation to imagine new ways of relating to one another - ways rooted in accountability, creativity, collective responsibility, and care without control. If you've been asking: What is matriarchy? Can matriarchy replace patriarchy? How do we build safer communities? Why does modern feminism still feel rooted in domination? What would a society centered around care actually look like? This episode is for you. TAP HERE to connect with Crystal Tennille Irby. Listen to Dem Black Mamas Podcast at: https://demblackmamas.com/podcast 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 work privately with Nikki TAP HERE to subscribe to the free weekly email series Resourcing a Revolution for more exclusive content Follow Nikki on IG: @nikkiblak

    1h 12m
  7. May 4

    Ep 75: Matriarchy Won't Work Until We Rethink Power: Care, Repair, and What Liberal Feminism Gets Wrong with Rev. Brig Feltus

    Matriarchy won't save us. Not if we're still operating from the same broken understanding of power that created the world we're trying to escape. In this episode of Interrupting Business as Usual, Nikki is in conversation with Reverend Brig Feltus - anti-racism educator, metaphysical minister, and someone who embodies what it means to move through the world with deep relational awareness. Together, they interrogate the rising call for matriarchy in response to patriarchy, gender-based violence, and femicide - especially as liberal feminism positions matriarchy as the "solution." And they ask a harder question: What if we're not actually ready for matriarchy? Because if your understanding of power is still rooted in domination, control, and hierarchy… Then you're not building something new. You're replicating the same system with different people at the top. In this episode, we explore: What matriarchy actually means (and what it doesn't) Why liberal feminism misunderstands power - and the consequences of that How Black women have always practiced forms of matrilineal care and collective responsibility Allo-parenting, community care, and relational ways of being Why integrity is a prerequisite for leadership, trust, and collective safety The role of repair and accountability in building any liberatory future How our socialization under patriarchy limits our ability to imagine something different Why many women either fear power or replicate domination when they access it What it actually requires to move toward a matriarchal or matrilineal society This isn't a conversation about replacing patriarchy with matriarchy. It's a conversation about transforming our relationship to power. Because without care, integrity, and repair… Matriarchy won't work. If you've been asking: "What is matriarchy?" "Is matriarchy better than patriarchy?" "Can feminism actually create liberation?" This episode will challenge what you think you know and invite you into something deeper. Connect with Reverend Brig Feltus by visiting https://www.rememberinstitute.com/ 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 work privately with Nikki TAP HERE to subscribe to the free weekly email series Resourcing a Revolution for more exclusive content Follow me on IG: @nikkiblak

    1h 6m
5
out of 5
25 Ratings

About

Interrupting Business as Usual is the weekly resource for folks who've awakened to oppression, injustice, and the b******t of the status quo and are looking for ways to live, work, parent, build, and lead in more subversive, disruptive, and liberated ways. We talk life, business, purpose, and liberation — for the newly aware and long-time interrupters alike. If you're ready to rise to your next level, as the most liberated version of yourself, you're in the right place. Let's interrupt business as usual.

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