No Images? Click here Serena Williams is ready to have another child, but she’s not ready to stop playing tennis just yet.The 36-year-old tennis superstar spoke about spending time with her daughter, planning her second child with husband Alexis Ohanian and attending the royal wedding in the “Badass Women” issue of InStyle magazine.“If I weren’t working, I’d already be pregnant. I hear everyone’s different, but I had a really easy pregnancy until the birth. Not even birth — after,” Williams said, referring to her near-death experience after having her daughter, Olympia.She later added, “I don’t know if I want to play if I have another baby, but you’re right. I need to talk to Alexis. We need a plan.”In case you missed it Need to knowIn its first season, “Luke Cage” focused intensely on its hooded, indestructible black hero (Mike Colter) and his encounters fighting crime in the storied streets of Harlem. But the second season grants a window into how these Harlem streets became what they are: culturally potent, historic, familial and rife with characters hoping to capitalize on all those traits.Alfre Woodard’s character is uniquely centered in the 2018 iteration of “Luke Cage.” She capitalizes on her lineage and hypnotic ability to persuade to do what’s best ― occasionally for Harlem, and often, for herself.Woodard joined HuffPost to discuss how she created Dillard, the complexity of her character and how Dillard’s uninhibited sexuality establishes her dominance.Slowly but surely, mental health has moved from the sidelines to the center of our national conversation around well-being. But discussing feelings and emotions is still a touchy subject in certain communities.After realizing that many African Americans weren’t embracing the importance of mental health, Joy Harden Bradford, an Atlanta-based therapist and founder of the mental health platform Therapy for Black Girls, made it her life’s work to encourage more people to get help, talk about it, and simply learn more about mental health.An innate people person and a problem solver, Bradford said her career as a therapist came naturally. “I was always that person in my friend group that people came to with their problems,” she told HuffPost.HuffPost is now a part of Oath and a part of Verizon. On May 25th 2018 we will be introducing a new Oath Privacy Policy which will explain how your data is used and shared. Learn More. Stay plugged in with the stories on black life and culture that matter. Does somebody keep forwarding you this newsletter? Subscribe here! Want more? Check out Black Voices.©2018 HuffPost | 770 Broadway, New York, NY 10003 |
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