logo
Janice Livingston honored with Black Excellence 365's Mary L. Jones Black Affirmation Award

Janice Livingston honored with Black Excellence 365's Mary L. Jones Black Affirmation Award

Yahoo10-03-2025

BLACKVILLE, S.C. (WJBF) — WJBF NewsChannel 6's Black Excellence 365 recognizes inspiring black individuals and organizations in the CSRA throughout the year. Recipients are honored with the Mary L. Jones Black Affirmation Award. For March, we honor Janice Livingston.For 69 years, Janice Livingston has called Blackville, South Carolina home. And for just as long, she's been dedicated to lifting up the people around her. 'We care about each other. We love each other,' she shared. We are concerned of each other, and we want everyone to be successful.'That commitment to service shines through her work. She spent 26 years leading Girl Scout Troop 765—without missing a single meeting. She made sure her scouts experienced the world. 'We've been in the White House twice. We've been to Tuskegee Institution; we've been to Pettus Bridge. We walked across the Pettus Bridge. We've all also gone to a Broadway play,' she recalled.
She wanted the girls to learn by seeing. 'When they read these stories in school, I wanted them to say, oh, we've been there. We did that. I wanted them to have those firsthand experiences of those activities,' Livingston shared.
Her impact goes beyond that. For the last 22 years, she's led the Together Sisters Club. It's a community service group focused on giving back. They host fish fries for vets, Easter egg hunts for kids, and lend a hand during the holidays. 'At Christmas, we do a Christmas bingo where we bring in prizes that parents that may not have money to buy presents for their family, but we supply them with gifts that they could possibly use for their Christmas gifts,' she added.
That mission hasn't changed, but how they serve has evolved. 'We do more drive through activities. It's not really a one-on-one, because of COVID, but we still provide those services every month.'Her love for her community extends beyond service—it's in the way she builds connections. 'My philosophy is to always try to do something that will make someone smile. I don't wanna see anyone upset. What you offer is good and what I'm offering and is good. And we put those two things together. We got a wonderful ingredient.'
She's even turned her own home into a place where friends and family can come together.Her kids outgrew the basketball court, so she turned it into the Bristol Lounge. 'In that lounge we socialize and have fun. We play games, we just talk about old times. We just come together and fellowship. And of course we always have a meal. We gotta eat, got to eat, gotta eat .'
Livingston, an educator for more than 30 years, says young people hold the key to a better future. 'If you listen more, you learn more. And once you get it in your, the education in your head, no one can take that away from you. Because education is the key to anything. And always learn to be kind to one another.'Even in retirement, she's not slowing down. 'I've been to Greece, I've been to Dubai, I've been to Paris, so I've seen some, but I need to see more. There's more out there for me to experience and to just be a part of, to see God's creation.'Throughout her work, one thing stays constant—her mission to bring people together.From shaping young minds to building a stronger community, Janice Livingston has spent decades making a difference. And that's why she's honored with this month's Black Affirmation Award.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Brown County United Way combines efforts with 20 nonprofits to expand HubCAP into mobile classroom
Brown County United Way combines efforts with 20 nonprofits to expand HubCAP into mobile classroom

Yahoo

time5 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Brown County United Way combines efforts with 20 nonprofits to expand HubCAP into mobile classroom

GREEN BAY, Wis. (WFRV) – Brown County United Way unveiled an expansion to its HubCAP on Tuesday morning, courtesy of a partnership with over 20 nonprofit agencies. The HubCAP is used to roll through neighborhoods and provide information, resources and more to community members without moving around too much. This new expansion features a mobile classroom. The Weidner announces seven show lineup for 2025-26 Broadway In Green Bay The mobile classroom is designed with on-the-go educational features, support services and more. The overall press conference to announce the mobile classroom included an interactive tour of the HubCAP vehicles. The overall program includes healthcare, mental health resources, early childhood care, financial assistance and countless other tools, all on the go, as the HubCAP stops at neighborhoods, events and even job sites. Click here for more details on the HubCAP. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

This Father's Day, Let's *Really* Talk to Our Dads
This Father's Day, Let's *Really* Talk to Our Dads

Yahoo

time6 hours ago

  • Yahoo

This Father's Day, Let's *Really* Talk to Our Dads

When my dad FaceTimes me, he's often multitasking — reading Facebook posts or watching a football game or an episode of Everybody Loves Raymond, oblivious to the fact that I can see his focus is elsewhere. I've grown used to it over the years, because even if he's distracted, at least he's checking in on me. I'm often preoccupied as well, just less visibly so: When we talk, sometimes I'm thinking about the next thing I want to say, or whether I remembered to turn the burner off on the stove. We both have ADHD — and in my father, that manifests as an innate restlessness. As my siblings and I unwrapped presents on Christmas morning or during birthday parties, he'd hover over us with a garbage bag, never letting the wrapping paper scraps touch the floor. During family movie nights, he'd get up halfway through National Lampoon's Christmas Vacation and start vacuuming. But meals out and car rides were different. At a restaurant or behind the steering wheel, my dad was forced to sit still, so he was easier to talk to. It wasn't that we were discussing anything important. In fact, the subject matter was irrelevant, ranging from drama with former friends to a paper I'd written for class. What I loved was knowing that my dad was listening to me with no distractions. Focused attention is harder to come by in 2025, even for those without ADHD. People listen to podcasts or audiobooks at accelerated speeds because they don't have enough time in the day (or are just impatient). We add so many items to our to-do lists that they start to feel like an overstuffed garbage bag. There's always somewhere we need to be, something we need to do. So it's not surprising that serious conversations — especially with people who can already be tough to connect with — get pushed to the back-burner. As I edited a new anthology for Simon & Schuster called What My Father and I Don't Talk About: Sixteen Writers Break The Silence, I thought about the numerous reasons why conversations between dads and their adult children can be so difficult — or even painful. A common theme that emerged was an unwillingness to engage with difficult topics. Men aren't encouraged to be direct about the emotions they're struggling with, often the result of a lifetime absorbing the tenets of toxic masculinity. And if someone can't discuss their own flaws or problems, how are they supposed to help their kids? There are also plenty of good excuses to intentionally not talk to one's father: Some of the contributors to my latest anthology wrote about dads who were harmful, whether they were emotionally manipulative, abusive, absent, or struggling with drug addiction. But when dads and their kids can fully open up to one another, it's a beautiful thing. In Susan Muaddi Darraj's 'Baba Peels Apples for Me,' the eldest daughter of Palestinian immigrants writes about coming to understand her father after years of resistance. Darraj writes that she felt increasingly isolated during her divorce and the pandemic — until her dad told her the words she needed to hear: 'It's not easy to tackle this life alone, my daughter…That's why I will always be here for you.' Her father sat with her in her pain and offered reassurance. As I read those lines, I thought about a similar moment with my own father on a humid August day in 2021. I had broken up with a longtime boyfriend and called my father mid-run, sweat and tears glistening on my face. He doesn't always know what to do when confronted with extreme emotions, so I was surprised when he didn't tell me to 'calm down and stop crying.' Instead, he said over FaceTime, 'You're going to be okay,' aware of the gravity of the situation and directing all his attention to me. Somehow, that made me feel like it would be. For Father's Day this year, I'm not buying my father a dense history book about World War II (he wouldn't have the patience to read it, anyway) or noise-canceling headphones (a gift given in a previous year). Nor am I getting him a gift certificate to eBay, even though I know he'd make good use of it for a new vintage truck accessory. Instead, I'm treating him and my husband to a lobster dinner. Away from the distractions of computers and televisions and phones, I'll ask my father how he's doing and what's on his mind lately. Who knows where the conversation could lead? All I know is that I want to listen. Michele Filgate is the editor of What My Mother and I Don't Talk About and What My Father and I Don't Talk About. Her writing has appeared in Longreads, Poets & Writers, The Washington Post, Los Angeles Times, The Boston Globe, The Paris Review Daily, Tin House, Gulf Coast, Oprah Daily, and many other publications. The post This Father's Day, Let's *Really* Talk to Our Dads appeared first on Katie Couric Media.

JENNIE: It's OK to be Different Day celebrates children with autism and their parents
JENNIE: It's OK to be Different Day celebrates children with autism and their parents

Yahoo

time6 hours ago

  • Yahoo

JENNIE: It's OK to be Different Day celebrates children with autism and their parents

AUGUSTA, Ga. (WJBF) — The inaugural 'It's Okay To Be Different Day' event is coming up June 21st. The day is also about Autism and Downs Syndrome Awareness. Vivian Butler is the owner of Kings and Queens Christian Academy, which is a daycare that serves special needs children. The event is her brainchild! Shaun Harris is a special needs teacher and founder of B Mighty Enterprises. Vivian Butler: Well, Jennie, I was sitting in my office at a daycare, and I've noticed a lot of my babies come in and they have special need problems. And with that being said, dealing with my granddaughter, also this has special needs. She's autistic. The Lord gave me, is okay to be different and allow these babies to be just who they are. A lot of them come in non-verbal and the Lord told me to look into their eyes and speak to their soul and pull out their voice. You know, a lot of times people talk about autism and they do 'autistic' things for the for the people. But it's never involving the children. I know, we do the autistic this, we do the autistic that. But we never include the child. This particular event, the Lord said include the babies. Don't leave them out because it's okay for them to be different. I called my son-in-law, Raymond Webber, and said, 'Son, this is what the Lord told me to do' and with that being said, he told me that we can use his gym, MTAG.' The day will include bouncy houses and face painting, the fire department is going to bring the fire trucks, and there will be lots of volunteers so the children can play and their parents won't worry. Shaun Harris: 'They can stand, they can run, they can jump — Whatever they want to do and have a good time. But also, this will also give the parents an opportunity to see how to interact in a different way, because sometimes they get burned out and they don't know. They get frustrated. So when they see someone, you know, reaching out or interacting with their child in a different way, I've learned that the parents learn from me.' Vivian Butler: 'We're looking forward to this day. We're so excited. The parents can get facials. They're going to have a private chef on the inside. The children are going to have food on the outside. We're going to have grills going. We've got a special deejay coming for them. So we're going to put our boots on the ground and we're going to make it happen.' Shaun Harris: 'We're grateful they are because they are – I always say that they are the magic. So to me, they are just the essence of love. And they're just what makes my heart beat. And all the things that are happening in this world, when there's sadness, a sickness, or devastation, those kids, when I look into their faces, everything is okay, even if it's just for a moment.' Once again, the inaugural 'It's Okay To Be Different Day' is coming up on Saturday, June 21st from1PM – 5PM. It's open to the public and it's going to be at 1610 Hunter Street in Augusta. For more information, call 706-836-8598. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store