Wakanda News Details

Helping women be Unapologetically them - Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

Self-love coach and author Ann-Marie Emmanuel is on a mission to help women love themselves.

She hopes to use her Unapologetically Me Women’s Retreat as the vehicle to do so.

It will be held from April 27-28 at Cheryl’s Grace Enrichment Centre, Las Cuevas.

TT-born, US-based content creator, educator and filmmaker Stacia Yearwood and entrepreneur, change facilitator and photographer Aderonke Bademosi Wilson will also facilitate. Yearwood will host a writing-therapy session and Wilson will facilitate photography lessons to help participants learn to see beyond what appears to be right in front of them.

The retreat will include four workshops, yoga, mindfulness and meditation sessions and farm-to-table cuisine, said a flyer.

Emmanuel’s mission is to lead, inspire and empower women, she said in a phone interview.

“Whether it is through my books, my writing, my seminars, retreats – whatever it is, my work is to lead, empower and inspire women to cultivate the best relationship they can have, which is with themselves.”

She became a strong champion of self-love after realising she was unfulfilled despite living the “American dream.”

Emmanuel was a US postal worker and also “accomplishing a lot, doing a lot of things,” such as managing her own fashion boutique and caring for her family – but was unhappy.

“I felt like I was chasing something, chasing success. I constantly felt like I was trying to make it….I was just tired, burned out, struggling, just wondering what was the purpose of all of this, if I did not feel that happiness and fulfilment.”

Emmanuel had a lot of dreams when she, her four siblings and mother migrated from La Romaine, south Trinidad to the US in 1970.

However, getting divorced and attending a transformative programme in 2007 changed her outlook. The programme taught her that whatever she wanted for her life she could have, through her active participation.

She left her job, returned full-time to TT in 2014 and decided to do something she'd always dreamed of: build an enrichment centre and start sharing ways for women to find self-love.

Before 2014, she would travel between the US and TT, and she began construction on the centre in 2011. It was completed in 2018. That was when she began hosting retreats.

She hosted an international one in 2019 and was scheduled to host one in 2020, but the covid19 restrictions postponed those plans. This weekend’s retreat will be the first since the pandemic.

Emmanuel believes the message of self-love is particularly important in today’s climate.

“In these intense times we are living in – especially during and after the pandemic – I think many women are struggling to make right choices for themselves.”

Many women were unaware of their true selves, did not know what they really wanted and were often forced to because of societal pressure, she said.

“We tend to push aside what we really want for fear that it won’t be accepted by others or society. A lot of time we want certain things but we are thinking about what it looks like in soc

You may also like

Sorry that there are no other Black Facts here yet!

This Black Fact has passed our initial approval process but has not yet been processed by our AI systems yet.

Once it is, then Black Facts that are related to the one above will appear here.

More from Home - Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

Arts Facts

Education Facts

Politics Facts