The Exit Interview: A Podcast for Black Educators

Boundaries, Burnout and Black Educator Wellness with Josephine Ampaw-Greene
EPISODE 64 • SEASON 5 00:50:03

In this powerful episode of The Exit Interview: A Podcast for Black Educators, Dr. Asia Lyons sits down with Josephine Ampaw-Greene —a licensed family therapist and former educator—to explore what it truly means to sustain wellness while navigating the demands of education and racial battle fatigue. Josephine shares her unique journey from paraeducator to residential school teacher to therapist and business owner. She opens up about the importance of pausing, setting boundaries, embracing joy, and why "being well means not pretending to be well."

Together, they unpack how career identity intersects with self-worth, how to support educators experiencing racism-related stress, and what families can do to create restorative spaces for their loved ones working in schools.

Key Topics Covered:

  • How to decide how much of your identity belongs to your career

  • Creating trauma-informed practices that center joy and authenticity

  • The impact of racism-related stress on educators and their families

  • The role of community and family in educator wellness

  • Practical regulation tools for teachers, like the “ice cube trick”

  • How Josephine builds a teaching practice that launches therapists of color

  • Why leaving education isn’t a failure—it’s a transition toward wholeness

All audio, artwork, episode descriptions and notes are property of Dr. Asia Lyons, for The Exit Interview: A Podcast for Black Educators, and published with permission by ALIVE Podcast Network.