Healing a City Featuring Sherry Gamble Smith

In this episode, we talk to Sherry Gamble Smith, the founder and CEO of WENet, a non-profit organization that helps to empower women. She is also the founding president of the Tulsa-Oklahoma Black Chamber of Commerce

Sherry tells us about her social contribution in Tulsa, the 1921 Greenwood Race Massacre that caused a devastating blow to the black community and its local economy, and how she, together with allies, continues to fight against racism, advocates fairness and works hand in hand in providing equal opportunities for her fellow African Americans.

listen now "Healing a city"

listen on apple podcasts, stitcher, spotify, iheart radio

Share:

Facebook
Twitter
Pinterest
LinkedIn

Related Posts

What’s Keeping You From Being at Peace With Money with Carrie Friedberg

Money isn’t just numbers. It’s emotion, identity, and the stories we carry without realizing it.

In this episode, Dr. Felecia Froe sits down with financial coach and author Carrie Friedberg to unpack what’s really behind financial stress, even for high-achieving women who “should” have it figured out. Carrie shares her personal journey from overwhelming debt and shame to becoming a financial coach who helps others build clarity, confidence, and peace with money.

How to Rebuild Financial Confidence and Create New Opportunities

How to Rebuild Financial Confidence and Create New Opportunities   Let’s talk about something many women quietly wonder about. What happens when life changes faster than your financial plan? Careers shift. Relationships change. Markets move. Suddenly, the stability you expected looks very different. In a recent conversation on the Wealth B-Hers Podcast, I spoke with

What No One Taught Us About Money And Why It Matters

There is a quiet belief many high-achieving women have but rarely say out loud:
“I should already know how money works.” And when they don’t? It turns into shame, silence, and staying stuck longer than they need to. In this episode, Dr. Froe gently dismantles that belief and replaces it with something far more powerful: truth. You were never taught how moneyactually works, and that is not a personal failure; it’s an education gap.