HomeHealthHealth Hero: GirlTrek Walks for Health and Sisterhood

Health Hero: GirlTrek Walks for Health and Sisterhood

Organization brings black women together to heal emotionally and physically

When Tanya Morgan Dixon and Vanessa Garrison met while working at an investment bank in Los Angeles, taking walks together helped them bond as friends, but also to help deal with the stress of their jobs. Neither one imagined that those hikes would have turned into GirlTrek, an organization founded in 2010 that focuses on encouraging black women to be physically active and to make health a priority in their lives.

Since its inception, more than 20,000 black women are affiliated with GirlTrek, which is amazing news given how prevalent racial health disparities are among black women. We are more likely to be obese, have high blood pressure and die from a number of cancers. Not to mention, we are at elevated risk for diabetes ,stroke and heart disease.

But it’s important to point out that GirlTrek isn’t just about walking. Its vision is steeped in a commitment to our history. Earlier this month, thousands of black women walked to honor Harriet Tubman Day as a means to show homage to this revolutionary woman. We sat down with Morgan Dixon and Garrison to talk about why walking is good for us, why it’s more than just exercise and the importance of black women taking time for themselves.

Who is GirlTrek for?

Garrison: It’s for anyone. But when we first started, we realized that there wasn’t anything for women who didn’t have a gym membership or a group that wasn’t for someone not training for a marathon or for women who wanted to be inspired by service. And so GirlTrek challenges women to link up with other women, create teams and walk together to create community.

What we know is that the impact is real. Over the last 3.5 years, we hear testimonies about how GirlTrek has helped other black women re-envision what their life could be and look like.

Why Harriet Tubman?

Morgan Dixon: We come from a long list of black women that decided they were going to be the agents of change in their lives and communities. Harriet Tubman embodies that for all of us. But we don’t just walk for Harriet, we walk for the other Harriets, the Fannie Lou Hamers and the many others who were and are courageous in taking control of their lives and destinies. Plus, if we don’t celebrate our heroes who will?

How can walking improve our overall health?

Garrison: Our core goal is to get women to walk 30 minutes for five days a week. And we know that by doing this, our entire constitution changes. A 20-minute walk can even get our brain going and improve our mood and mental health. Just walking and laughing and friends can make all of the difference, not to mention these walks with friends can be a means of checking in on each other and making us accountable for our fitness goals.

For the rest of the interview, go to BET.com.

Categories

Latest Posts

Sign Up for the Black Health Matters Weekly Newsletter

Not Interested, Close Window
Powered by