Skip to main content

October 2024 | Howard County

Page 1

The Howard County

I N

F O C U S

VOL.14, NO.10

F O R

P E O P L E

O V E R

More than 30,000 readers throughout Howard County

Poet teaches the art of healing

410-992-1241 vantagepointresidences.org Managed by

Life Care Services®

OCTOBER 2024

I N S I D E …

LEISURE & TRAVEL

Visiting Spain for the olive harvest and Roman ruins; plus, a weekend on the Eastern Shore, and what to do when your flight gets cancelled page 22

Vanita Leatherwood, an award-winning poet and teaching artist who works at HopeWorks Howard County, offers transformative workshops, some tailored especially for older adults.

Day job supports survivors

In the early 2000s, Leatherwood worked at nonprofits in the Washington, D.C. metropolitan area on efforts to prevent child abuse and violence. There, she learned how to conduct presentations, seminars and workshops in schools, shelters, group homes and community centers. She then moved to the Howard County

Register Today

Connection • Community • Columbia

5 0

PHOTO BY HOPEWORKS OF HOWARD COUNTY

By Robert Friedman Vanita Leatherwood grew up in the 1960s in Washington, D.C., “at a time when everything on the news was violent, particularly against Black people,” she said. But it wasn’t only on the news that Leatherwood saw violence. She is herself a survivor of childhood abuse and trauma. As a teenager, Leatherwood was deeply moved by poet Maya Angelou’s memoir, she told the Beacon in a recent interview. “Reading I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings really helped me to process what I experienced as a child and to know that I wasn’t alone,” she said. “That’s how my work with the arts first started — with my own need, my own comfort, to process the world around me.” Now 64 and a grandmother, Leatherwood is an award-winning poet, playwright, therapist and educator who uses poetry, music and fine arts to both reflect on her own life and help others to heal. Leatherwood said she stumbled across her line of work almost by accident as she was searching for graduate schools. “I knew I wanted to do something that was healing and therapeutic, so I Googled the words ‘poetry’ and ‘therapy,’ and the National Association for Poetry Therapy (NAPT) came up. I thought I was on ‘Candid Camera,’”she said, laughing. After taking classes with the NAPT, Leatherwood went on to Goddard College in Vermont, where she earned a Master of Arts degree in psychology. Today, she teaches classes to a variety of groups throughout Howard County. “I use the arts as a healing tool, as well as to bring access to different social issues,” Leatherwood said.

FREE

office of the National Alliance on Mental Illness, a nonprofit on whose local board she still sits. Since 2011, she has worked at HopeWorks of Howard County, a nonprofit that provides comprehensive services to survivors of sexual and domestic violence. See POET, page 28

VANTAGE POINT

Fall Compass

Seminar Series

Attend our final seminar on Rightsizing & Selling a Home in Today’s Market on Oct 10th. Scan the QR code or visit our website to learn more.

ARTS & STYLE

Chamber Music Maryland’s new name reflects its expansive mission; plus Bob Levey on the upsides of yesterday’s simpler cars page 26

FITNESS & HEALTH 4 k Smartphones are dumb at bedtime k Trying to quit? Try e-cigarettes MONEY 18 k Organize important documents k Pros and cons of hybrid cars ADVERTISER DIRECTORY

31

PLUS CROSSWORD, BEACON BITS, CLASSIFIEDS & MORE


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
October 2024 | Howard County by The Beacon Newspapers - Issuu