00:00:00 welcome to the Strategic moves podcast I’m your host kenal and this is the podcast where we dive into issues shap in our community Youth Empowerment and education and advocacy is what we’re going to talk about today each episode we Spotlight change makers creating real impact and today’s guest is no exception I’m thrilled to welcome Jawan Smith a educator advocator author who has worked in Cleveland to transform the lives of many young people her dedication is helping families and young people succeed is nothing short of inspiring so if this sound like
00:00:35 something you’ll be interested in what I want you to do is sit back hit the like button hit the Subscribe button and hit the notification Bell as well that the next so that you’ll know the next time this program comes out so what we’re going to do is we’re gonna get right back into this program but before we get started I want to just do a real quick shout out to our podcast producer none other than DJ true Latif what’s going on in there brother what’s up what’s up in the back room every day is Aid running all the controls pushing all mashing all the buttons
00:01:08 making sure we have a smooth ride let’s try to have one today how about that that’ll be awesome with yeah yeah cuz all this cold boy these last two days man how did you survive with the zero below temperatures on I believe it was mon Monday Tuesday and Wednesday stayed in the house easiest way was just stay in the house and that’s all I did I stayed back I sat back I chilled and I ain’t do much of anything so it worked out pretty well for me I did as minimal as possible and also kicked off the fireplace had to get that fireplace going you awesome I’m excited today because I’m
00:01:51 getting back into the mood of podcasting and we got guests that are going to be coming in here we’re getting things up and going and we’re working hard to try to build a better program for the people to give good contact and good content for the masses so that’s what our goal is and so we’re going to try to keep doing this and try to bring on better guests and keep things going and today’s guest is somebody I’m looking forward to talking to she’s interesting I try to bring on people who I find interesting and I check out other podcast and what other people are doing and
00:02:24 then I pick a gym or two out of that and today we did that so it’s going to be a good conversation man sounds like a good one right let’s jump on into it our guest today Jan is the founder of two incredible programs get our babies to college 101 which is a program that helps equip parents and young people through the college prep process and she has another program which is called a thousand ties a life skill incentive for young people a life skills program for young men focus on building confidence and essential skills she’s also the author author of seven books I thought it
00:03:02 was just a few but she has seven books she is the author of U one of them is called Grandma Hattie’s ice cream and awardwinning children book that’s now being translated into Spanish growing up in Cleveland’s Huff neighborhood jwan turned her experience into a mission of uplift others today we will Explore her journey her programs and how she created brighter future for Cleveland’s youth so without further Ado DJ let’s welcome Jawan Smith to the program Smith how you doing I’m good I’m good thanks for having thanks for coming on the
00:03:39 program we try to do what we can and I watched you on a couple other podcasts and out there doing the work so I figured let’s get her in here and let’s talk to her and let the people knows what you’re up to these days I appreciate the opportunity I love being able to not only share my story but share the purpose and the mission and hopes of bringing more people into the work oh excellent let’s jump right into it Jan growing up in the Huff neighborhoods a community known for strength and resilience how did your early experience shape your passion for education and advocacy what was
00:04:15 why you get into that what was it like growing up in Huff my Huff experience was a bit different cuz my mom was a single mom but she was more like a drill sergeant so really she didn’t play I I didn’t go to third good wreck until I was an adult she we didn’t go past 93rd we had to be in by a certain time she was the mama screaming out the windows you know calling everybody to come in so I didn’t really get a lot of in the neighborhood time I would go school home school home or to the library I spent a lot of time at the library that was my way to get out and I played a lot
00:04:49 of sports so that was what kept me moving because my mother was big on education and keeping us out the streets you and you said you play a lot of sports what sports did you play volleyball was my sport of choice and then I played track just to stay conditioned during the year okay or ran track rather but volleyball was my Sport and what high school you went to John hey John hey okay all right so you play sports in school and kind of did that to get out of out the house a little bit mom I’m going to the library hey you know what it used to be a time I remember that when I was
00:05:22 growing up I’m going to the library and the walk to the library was the adventure it wasn’t so when you made it there was one but it was the walk to the library that was the whole key to that whole story and people just got to understand that’s what the whole key to I’m going to the library was all about after that did you go to college so my path was a little different I ended up I went to David and Myers or it was called D College then yeah it was on yeah and so I had a guidance counselor that was amazing and so one day I was just talking to him about different things that
00:05:56 I do because I was planning events my best friend was a DJ Joe boom and he used to do kid parties and so I was helping him with promotion and Street work I had told my guidance counselor about that type of stuff one day I’m riding and I get a call and this this is Kim Johnson from 93 FM and I’m like what like why is Kim Johnson calling me and so what happened was he submitted a resume that I didn’t create he created a resume and submitted it they had a promotions position open and so I ended
00:06:26 up leaving College because I got this position at the radio so that kind of took me down the path of promotion and working with different record labels and traveling so I did that for a long time and then I ended up I was on the road with Yin yangang Twins and I got sick and so I had to come home and it took them a year to figure out that I had lupus but I was sick and so once they got me together and got my medicine together I went back to I went to college at that time so I spent I want to say
00:06:57 nine years just out doing music stuff M before I actually ended up going back to college you was rolling with the all that story you told me all I in my mind thinking like she said she was rolling with the I’m thinking about Hey DJ did they make that song whisper yeah what the whisper came all right all right well that’s yeah that was the that was the joint too that was the joint the yinyang Twins Whisper song yeah you you was right up there in the height of when all of that was jumping yes it had I was still with them I think I was with them I got sick maybe like a year after
00:07:35 Whisper Song and you say it was lupus lupus yeah and it completely took me all the way down and I’m out here on the road you know how the road is we living out of suitcases fast you going going and I just I couldn’t function and so I had to come home and so one doctor we went to they was saying oh she got leukemia my mama like the devil’s a liar let’s get a second opinion and so we went to three different doctors and I got diagnosed with hypoglycemia like they was diagnosing me with so many things and then my mom um found a specialist okay and they finally diagnosed me with lupus but
00:08:10 see was back then lupus wasn’t as as prevent as it is now was then people had it but people didn’t talk about it it was like it was something like a shameful and it’s it’s something that your body is attacking itself so is it is I know more women who get is it a woman’s disease I wouldn’t say that I would it’s definitely more prevalent in people of color a lot of women get it I think have it they just don’t talk about maybe that’s the what you’re saying don’t talk about okay wow and how old were
00:08:36 you when you I was 25 when I got diagnosed wow so how was that Journey that was challenging because I had to so my lupus affects me in a way where it affects my skin so I burn really bad I can’t do a lot of sun um my eyes are super super sensitive to the point where I’ve had all kind of inflammations in my eye my left eye after I actually lost my vision for a minute in my left eye because the inflammation was so bad I didn’t even know you could get inflammation in your eye wow and then my joints were really bad so it would make it hard for me to function my skin would hurt so
00:09:12 some days I didn’t even want to put clothes on so imagine getting up and your whole body hurt I’m not going outside cuz I don’t want to put no clothes on so it definitely took a minute to get adjusted to the new medicines and being aware of I can’t sit out in this sun or my skin going on fire or I had to really be mindful of the environments that I was in now you got better the medication got better now you with it or you still have to really watch it at some point the sun definitely will take me out I have picnics and all that you very I’m always with sunglasses
00:09:46 like when I came in you I always have sunglasses on okay I usually always have a hat okay I wear sunblock I carry umbrellas everywhere I don’t play with the sun cuz the sun will put me down wow I’m glad you’re doing better yeah I’m I’m doing a lot better that’s great that’s great who were some of your key influencers when you were growing up that kind of helped guide you through so my number one person of course would be my mom my grandparents were off the hook my my grandmother Peggy Jean I
00:10:16 always tell people either I’m having a Peggy jeene type of day or Charlie Moss so Charlie Moss was my grandfather he was real laidback my grandmother was a pistol okay and so she would give you the business so that’s where I got my advocacy from okay she always said everybody got a boss you write a letter so everybody got a boss so that was her platform of how she lived life and then KY long who worked for cmsd he was one of the athletic uh directors there um I met him at a time where I was fighting for my children and he just loved my passion and so he taught me the proper
00:10:50 way to fight when you’re in no setting so he’s always been someone that I’ve been super close to So when you say fighting for your children what was that all about just being able to have a voice and use your voice where they actually listen cuz a lot of times when you’re going especially when you’re fighting for your kids and something bad has happened or you feel like they weren’t being treated correctly and you leave with passion but you have to leave with passion and common sense because you go in there screaming and shaking tables they’re not going to really move for you
00:11:21 but Cal taught me how to use my voice where I can make effective change and so that’s actually what started my journey in philanthropy interesting that’s show teaching you advocacy one onone cuz that’s part of it people don’t want to hear there’s a lot of people with a lot of great causes and a lot of great ideas but the way they come at people it’s your approach you can shake tables like I love I’ll shake a table in a minute but I’mma shake it but you’re actually going to hear what I’m saying while I’m shaking it corre and I’m the type of person where I don’t just fight for
00:11:49 my children I fight for everybody’s children what inspired you to start get our babies into college 101 so getting our babies to college 101 started because my daughter was told she had dyslexia and she wanted to go to college but somebody told her because her dyslexia she was just going to go to work for it she wasn’t going to college really and so for me it’s who do you think you are and then as I started to you know learn how to help her get to College one of the people told me that I’m
00:12:17 just a parent and so that was like a trigger like you can’t tell me what I just without parents you don’t have students without students you don’t have a school that’s correct and so that means that I have value and so what that led me to do was I started doing research on how to get my baby to school and then other parents started to see and they’re like wait the schools aren’t helping us can you help me and so what in turn happened was the school found out that I was helping parents outside of school time so the school started to try and bring me in to help hey can you
00:12:48 come talk to the parents about FASA so giving it a parents perspective okay A friend of mine found out about this pitch competition with Cleveland Leadership Center called accelerate and so she’s you’re out here doing this and you’re doing it out of your pocket go pitch this idea and see if it’s really a thing and so I pitched in 2017 and I won the education category and so Eric Gordon was one of my judges and when I say that next week he had his people find me and I had a meeting with him
00:13:14 and that next week I had a contract I tell people my business had a body before it had legs because I was trying to catch up because Eric’s like my parents need this assistance like we need to be in these buildings teaching them what it looks like to get ready ready for college and how to prepare and you know how to make the best decision because a lot of time as parents we have this big vision of what we want for our children but how many times have we sat down and ask our children what they want this is true and I can credit that to I did a program for college now and we’ll talk
00:13:49 a little bit about it let’s get into that this why I say my programs go over we had a I was doing a program for college now they wanted us to do some recruiting for them and they had two programs they had a one program they wanted us to recruit in the city of Cleveland to recruit adults telling them they can go back to school and there was resources to help them go back to get their GED and so on and so forth and then they had another program that they were doing that was a program they just had certain areas Cleveland Heights was one of the areas that they wanted us to go there and
00:14:22 knock on doors of students and parents to get more kids enrolled into the program they their numbers were low in that school believe it or not and it was like I believe yeah I was shocked cuz all my kids graduated from and all of them went to college and and but every year as my kids got older they all kept saying the school was changing it’s changing that it ain’t the same it ain’t the same and but with that I learned from the people who were going knocking on doors talking to them that the parents that’s who I want to talk about the parents who were seemed like they were so not
00:14:59 engag engaged in that whole process themselves having the guides and everything else just one thing we’re going to really talk about how great that is but since we’re here let’s talk about these parents these parents it was one case where somebody knocked on the door and they asked the kid kid came to the door and was like oh we wasn’t going blindly we were going to doors where kids in school filled out the paper said they wanted to get information about going to college but they were underage and you had to get their parents consent to do they were sending us to the doors to
00:15:30 knock for the parents to say hey can you sign this form cuz Little Johnny want to go to college and he just wanted to get you the information and we knocked on doors there was parents who came to the door was like he don’t want to go to school they ain’t going to college they it ain’t happening and then one guy came I the one that got us the most was the one who the son we said he filled out the form he said he wanted to go he called and he came downstairs and the parent was like you filled out this for me you say you want to go to college and the kid was like yeah I want to go
00:15:59 he said you really want to go and the the kid looked at him got intimidated said no I don’t really want to go and he just walked away these parents so with parents you you getting multiple different situations so you’re getting the parents that have never went to college you’re getting parents that have may not have graduated from high school so it’s intimidating then when you’re talking about fast forood now you’re talking about getting in people business so that’s a major issue and I think that’s why the schools felt value in what I do because I’m coming
00:16:29 as a parent I’m not coming as a school person so they might feel a little more comfortable telling me different situations cuz we all know people got different stuff they doing under the table or they don’t want the government in their business and then some people just feel like they child won’t do well at college and this could be a part of not having a discussion have you asked your child what it is they want to do they’re not having those discussions or they might have never even thought that this was a possibility because of their financial situation so you’re walking
00:17:00 into so many different things and you’re walking in blind and then there’s the other side which is where I advocate a lot where parents don’t even feel like they’re a part of the process so now okay my child a senior I ain’t heard from you in four years three years they’ve been in your school now hear you come popping up on my door telling me you can get my kid to college what do you know about my kid what do you know about us you haven’t tried to include me in the process prior to so why are you here now so now you get that push back because the parents didn’t feel like they were
00:17:29 part of the process parents don’t feel welcome but it’s but the kids suffer they do but I think that’s because the relationships are not there the schools have to learn that it’s a partnership the school won’t sign fast for that’s not your role your the role of the parent is important so they need to build those relationships freshman year so this I know we ain’t come on to talk about this but I can’t help it I agree because I’m disappointed in the parents these days and I’m not here to bash them at all it’s different times and the times are different and I get and that’s
00:18:05 why I’m really giving it a break this the parents are not the same parents that I get all of that parents are younger they’re younger they’re younger and then people are on instant money everything is instant and quick yeah so when you look at go to four school for four years and then come back out with 20 $30,000 in debt we’re not doing that MH so that that’s where people could be with it I’m not speaking for all and I don’t think that it’s parents that don’t care I just think they are they uninformed they don’t know especially with people of color what we do not
00:18:39 want to acknowledge when we don’t know stuff pride is an issue being able to come in and say yeah I don’t know I didn’t go to college I didn’t do a fast for instead of coming in and saying hey can you help me with this so what would make you different you had challenge you had a daughter who was dyslexic who obviously was going to have some challenges in going you knew that she wanted to go and she knew heck she had to be just as scared as anybody else and you also fill in that thing so what was the difference what made you say not only I’m going to do this but I’m GNA do it for
00:19:08 others I had the conversation with my children I talked to M what do you want to do what’s the goal because we need to start working in Middle School to figure out how to put this plan together so we start in middle school and that’s what I teach people it doesn’t start in ninth grade because if you start a nth grade to me I feel like you’re behind already because for some reason ninth graders feel like it’s a free year they just just getting there it’s they freshman they having fun so if you’re counting on ninth grade year most kids do not do well freshman year and isn’t I’m
00:19:37 mistaken from the fast for test and all of that when you get ready not the fast for but your test isn’t the ninth grade year is the most important grade is the 11th grade the most important year I know one of them was to be like the most important grade out all of you cannot blow that year 11th grade year is the most important year but when it comes to starting to navigate that proc eth grade is the most important because now especially in Cleveland they have high schools that are specific to different career Fields okay so if you can get a jump on that and go to
00:20:09 a school that has manufacturing or a school that has cosmetology or a school that has a nursing program or STNA program then you can pick a high school based off of what your field is and go to that and you might decide that’s not even what you want to do and then you’ll be like a lot of adults that we know that went to school picked a career did it for a year or two and they’re like this is terrible and now they got to start all over because people aren’t doing shadowing they’re not doing internships they’re not seeing what the career actually is they’re going based
00:20:37 off of what other people have said or what they see on TV so let’s since we on education because we you got a lot to cover here but we gonna stay on education and we rolling good what about the myth let’s talk about cmsd the myth of the school itself not I’m not going want to pick on the schools but let’s talk about the enrollment because that’s the biggest thing right now is that numbers that don’t seem to be in the school and that kind of thing and the thing that’s surrounding I know cmsd has his issues of growing and everything but is there any myth out there
00:21:10 that you want to that you can really say you know what people think this but cmsd is really doing this and this is really good I think it depends on what specifically you’re looking for see MZ has some great like I said the Independent Schools the small schools I think that was a good thing you can pick a school that has a specific program but when you’re looking at different opportunities as a parent you have to make a decision if my child wants to play football to go to cmsd for opportunity they got to go to G Academy if they want to play basketball and have opportunities
00:21:46 where you going Glenville or road so you have to be as a parent you have to make the best decision for your child and so I would say if I had to say the best thing about cmsd right now is the small schools M having the opportunity to get on the hand on on on the job training East Tech has the culinary program so if you can get into one of those programs I would say that’s probably one of the best things that cmsd has to offer right now that’s excellent excellent and your kids went through cmsd both of mine graduated from cmsd my daughter came out of tech and my son is a
00:22:19 hornet like me oh okay all right how old are your kids my daughter is 27 and my son is 23 27 and 2 and let’s talk about your son because I think your son is probably one of the reasons why you got your other business got going the other business you got started and that is a thousand ties yes which is a b organization that you put together tell everybody what a thousand ties is all about so I started a thousand ties after I watched my son teach himself how to tie tie on YouTube and so it just made me think of all of the other single parents who might not have had a guy around
00:22:59 or a male influence to be able to teach their son that skill and then I started to watch my son and his friends and the lack of communication and the way they communicate and the way they engage with females and I’m just like man it’s so many basic things like my son knows it because I teach him and then I have a lot of guy cousins and so like my cousin Antoine he’s like his step in dad and so he’s had that influence so I see it with him but then I’m looking at his friends and they’re not doing when they are next to to each other they’re texting instead of talking or when they
00:23:31 go out with a girl they’re not opening doors or they don’t they don’t have those basic skills and so that led me to want to have a day of community for them and so what I think with young men I feel like they get overlooked we talk about them when they do something bad but we’re not creating opportunities to avoid something bad and so my thought was to have a day and so that was when the Thousand TI event came and so after the first year like we had such a great success with we did it in partnership with cmsd but then when they left I got sad because I’m like man we had
00:24:03 them for S hours we might have taught them a few things but now what so let’s talk about because a thousand TI Why the name a thousand TI I’m it could have been okay tie day but what made you come up with a thousand ties and tell us what the event actually was so I had this idea of me and coming together to help the boys learn how to tie ties and so I was talking to our Grimes and I’m like y’all should help get through the ties with the kids and he’s no you’re going to do it and I’m like but I’m a woman and so he but you’re a mom and I’ll support you and so I said okay where
00:24:36 am I going to get these ties from and so I said maybe if I ask the community to help me collect a thousand ties then like we could use a thousand ties for a long time and so the first year we actually collected 10,000 ties woo lordy the first year oh man okay no they should have been 10,000 right I was pushing it because I’m a person I don’t like asking people and stuff so I’m like I want to be greedy so I’m like maybe if we could just try to collect a thousand times let ask old ignorant question what was you like when you got 10,000 times I know you where did they come all
00:25:09 to your house and everything at first they were in my house in my living room stacked up in storage totes and my brother came over one day he said girl if you don’t get a St unit cuz I’m like wow I want to make sure that we got them cleaned they were all kind of new time all kind of yeah like I wanted to make sure we was in them correctly and so I’m like I didn’t want to do storage get this stuff out your Li room so I ended up getting a storage unit and then NFL Alumni Association reached out to me and so they actually had NFL players just start sending me boxes and boxes
00:25:47 wow of ties wow and so we went from the smallest storage unit and went up like three sizes within the first year because we had so many ties what you do it all them ties we them out every year we give them out we at our I imagine you’re not asking for any more ties right now oh no we always collecting you still you still collecting cuz we recycle them out like soon as we get them clean and we go right out we go to people’s events we’re all summer people can book us and we come out so how you get a tie how do you get one from us yeah you just called it email us we just took
00:26:19 a box of ties to a a cmsd school last week they emailed and said they were having something and they needed some ties okay we box them up and drop them off so people know like they don’t have to do tie collections because we have them so they can call us I get calls from all over we get ties from all over the country literally people in the ties all right so let’s talk about the event all right so now I got all these ties I said okay they in my living room brother convinced me put them in the
00:26:44 storage room now I got to actually do something with these ties so what did you do so we have our annual event it’s in February and we did it in February intentionally because it’s black history month so all of our presenters are people of color the boys have a full day they get workshops they get continental breakfast they get lunch but I always look at things as a parent so I wanted to make sure I eliminated all barriers so we wanted to give our moms a day of self-care so we do yoga we have a licensed psychologist and then our moms have a open forum and so for them it’s
00:27:17 giving them community so other moms that might be dealing with stuff that you’re dealing with and it’s usually like the Hot Topic like we have to kick the moms out they have so much fun and then we um also so created we have Finish Line is our sponsor and so they have a kids room okay so their staff come and they volunteer and they play games and they have snacks and we get a character so the kids have their own room and then this year our grinds will be bringing a Fatherhood Initiative so they’ll be doing their fatherhood table talk so this will be the first year that the fathers have
00:27:47 their own workshops okay and we have last year we had 40 organizations giving away free stuff free items free information we have basketball games so it’s just a full day of activity this year the Warrenville band will be kicking us off so and y’all be at where we’ll be Warrenville he high school you’ll be at War so you done Str for wings you out that in Cleveland we were doing it in Cleveland and then the pandemic hit and so with pandemic hit the first year we didn’t do anything we had a resource event so because we couldn’t be inside we partnered with the East Side school and
00:28:22 the West Side school and we set up tables and all of our partners that come and set up tables and we just let families driveth through but then the next year when the world was opening cmsd still wasn’t doing big events okay so uh Mr Jolly was like come on over it’s Jolly a good dude I love Jolly Jolly good jolly do not play about them kids he don’t I knew Mr Jolly when he was over at was it Adams I think it was Adams if this gonna benefit his kids you can come with it wow yes he’s a good dude hey tell me about share us a success story from the program did you like the impact
00:28:58 one of the students that you did your program and you said he’s a product of mine this is what I’m going to say so we have one young man he’s actually an international model now we talked about that’s right yes Julian is a model you can see him on Time Square he be in the mall I know he was doing Ru 21 he’s had some real really big contracts I think all last summer he was in Japan he travels the country and he’s a professional model and for a minute he was on our board so I had him on our board and he’s just been great he comes to the event every year and the kids
00:29:32 just love to see him and because he famous Big Time famous ab and what school did he go to he went to East Tech with my daughter oh excellent in this world with all this technology and everything that’s going on why do you think soft skills like tying to tie or writing in cursive or all these little bases I think you do etiquette classes with these gentlemen and everything why is you why you think that’s really important these days because think they need to be able to stand on their own outside of Technology they need to be able to represent themsel in the best way especially for
00:30:05 our young men our black and brown boys they need to be able to be seen and the skills we teach them it gives them confidence it teach them Stress Management it teaches them how to be the best version of themselves people laugh when I tell them we do sewing and they’re like you teach boys to sew yes we do because sewing is multi-purpose we cut on the jazz music they concentrate it gives them it’s a distraction it’s a stress reliever and it gives them a skill so they’re getting multiple things and the boys usually are better than the girls with someone it’s really wild because I grew
00:30:40 up and I was the only guy in the house with my grandmother and I had aunts and they had daughters I was the only guy in the house so I learned how to sew I learned how to do all of that but I also went to I used to teach us home back we used to have to remember you us have to se that little and they don’t have any of those classes don’t have of those they don’t have that we do our stem project our stem chapter and they get to build robots and so with that they’re learning how to read instructions they’re learning how to read blueprints they’re learning about tools
00:31:12 they’re getting to use tools so basic stuff because you’ll be surprised don’t know how to use a screwdriver don’t know how to use a hammer and just not to say build something but just like you say to be able to everything you get now you got to put it together so just to be able to do that is is a real really good skill and on the etiquette side of learning proper etiquette I think is just something that every guy should learn it’s so funny that I’ve had kids come back and they miss SMI I took a girl on a date and she was so shocked I put my napkin in my lap
00:31:42 and I’m like see I’m trying to tell you you got earned a couple points off something as small as putting a napkin in your lap but it’s something that long term you’ll really need that skill you really need that skill and and it helps you not even for just that young but you’re going to be in a office set and you going to go out just with even some of your coworkers and just for them to know okay you really got your stuff together or you can you got some kind of decency that’s all I’m trying not come on people and our brothers really needed so I really kudos to you reaching
00:32:17 out in the program still going on now yes we’re all three Invictus campuses so we work more with the non-traditional students so the students that are life is happening or as they say life is life and so a lot of them have children they might be homeless different situations children in school with children 100% wow 100% cuz we work with girls too I’m acting like I’m shocked but it was like was in school but they’re eager because life is stuff is happening and they need to know what Sal manella is cuz we do a kitchen safety class so understanding that understanding how
00:32:49 to fill out paperwork we do handwriting so they can learn how to write their signature when they’re signing for documents we’ve had kids come in bring leases because people be trying to do they really be territory trying to get these kids and sign having them sign up for stuff they know that they can’t afford and so once we build that trust they come in and they like Auntie look what these people gave me do this make sense and the goal is to yes to teach them life skills but and to teach them how to Advocate but to create a form of family because a lot some of them don’t
00:33:20 have family so a lot of them call me auntie and I I don’t have a problem with that because that means that you trust me and before you make a major decision maybe you’ll come and ask first before you go sign your life away because a lot of us have done that we just sign and stuff and that’s you get caught up in a 10year contract for something you paying for three times over that’s correct so just getting them to understand what real life actually looks like that’s excellent excellent and like you say if you just want to tie you just call your organization 100% we always got
00:33:51 ties we come to people’s events you have to book us three weeks in advance though CU we book up especially in the summer but we come to events we do tie lessons if you’re ever at an event people walking around with t-shirts with ties on We There we do both ties no we don’t do both TI oh what just regular teach me how to put my assc in with my little I put my ass one of my board members he’s a Q and so he’s supposed to be teaching us how to do that but right now it’s just regular TI yeah B time would be nice now you see that guy who say I actually had to tie
00:34:26 my bow tie for my wedding and I leared that from you that would be so awesome let’s keep it moving here you’re not just a community leader and all of your stuff you’re an author and you so here told me you done wrote seven books now that’s impressive seven books so go on and lay them out name them all what’s all seven books you done wrote my top book of course is Grandma has ice cream give me an order what was the first one in this world my first book is Zari goes to college and that was accident I interviewed Margaret Bernstein at the author’s Expo some years ago
00:34:58 and so she flipped the interview on me and was like have you ever wrote a book and I’m like marget I don’t write I do workshops and she’s have you ever journaled or Tak notes and I’m like when I go on College visits to my do my research for curriculum I said I took notes I took my grandson and so she gets a book and I’m like it’s not a book and she it’s a book and I put it together and she actually edited for me so my first book Is edited by a Grammy winning author wow that’s cute and so zakari goes to college is the first book and then the second book was Grandma Hattie
00:35:29 so Grandy Grandma Hattie’s ice cream it teaches numbers and colors using scoops of ice cream and so the first time I released it was just a regular book and that one was on Amazon’s top 25 twice when it first released wow and then the next book I did the second in the zakari series so is that what so I gave you Grandma Hattie and so the second zakari book is zari’s carnival adventure and so I partnered with the a Cleveland police detective and and so she put safety tips in the book and then the next book I released Grandma hadie as a coloring book let put this on while she
00:36:06 talking yeah so now it came out as a coloring book and then the next book I released was Maya and so Maya is a play on Marsha and so she gets out of the baby gate and it’s all about her day out of the baby gate and then each one of my books in the back there’s some sort of resource so Grandma had these ice cream there’s a ice cream recipe my there’s a listing of ways to keep baby safe the zakari books both have resources in the back and then I have a book called A to Z with me it’s a activity book for kids to learn their alphabet and to be able to write words out and so that one’s
00:36:41 just available on Amazon and then I just released Grandma Hattie’s ice cream in Spanish wow oh and then I got a very Moss Christmas I forgot about that one oh very Moss Christmas yes so My Family’s last name is moss okay and the book is a alphabet book and it’s everything on Christmas A to Z with my grandparents yeah so how you get inspired to just do the books what made you say I heard how she told you that and after that you get that but what made you say because there’s a lot of rams of
00:37:13 books you can get into you can write there people write love stories and people write so what made you say I’m going to stay in this this this kind of genre because my grandson didn’t have books with characters of color so he has a lot of books that was teaching numbers and colors but none of the characters look like him wow and so that’s why Grandma hadie I was actually working on a whole another book and I kept dreaming about my grandma hadie and I’m like okay I got it I I’ll write this book you keep coming to me and so I wrote that book and it just and I wrote that book in 2020
00:37:44 I want to say and I’m still selling huge numbers on that book yeah Maple just bought about 4,000 books I think wow they buy books every other year okay and then they put them in their book vending machines for the kids and stuff okay so that’s that you once you get like into that kind of loop you it’s every time they need books they going to call they like this as a book for their school and with their that’s awesome and so any all of your books or just this one you got there Maple has Mara and Grandma hadti and then with Grandma Hattie we come out and we make ice cream
00:38:17 with the kids so they can book us for we call it it’s a stem activity because the kids get to do the measurements some people book us and they just get a kids ice cream but some of them will book us and the kids get to actually make ice cream how old are these kids when you saying they booking you come what age Ran So I read all the way up to grade six actually okay the big kids love Grandma hat they say it look like media on the book it does costume version of media for sure yeah they say it look like M they like it and then my book readings are very interactive it’s a lot of call
00:38:48 and response in those two books it gets very loud when we read those books oh that’s that’s very creative and very so you’ve been able to take that turned that into a foundation and turned it into way of working and means of employment and Entrepreneurship and author and all of my characters are real people so those are like Maya that’s my granddaughter so I use real people in real life situations oh Grandma hat is grandma that’s my grandma that’s grandma you said okay the little girl that’s my cousin Aubrey okay so I use real characters in the book
00:39:22 Maya Maya is Maya is my granddaughter and then the little boy in the book zakari is my grandson so all of the characters are real people my goal is to write a book that features every person in my family to continue with the m Legacy so that’s my goal so what made you decide to go with this AR Artistry and find and there what made you did they give you had to pick through I imagine and what made you I’m looking at the theme of you use the same artist I used the same guy I actually found him on Fiverr and so yeah some people say had bad experience he’s I had good and bad he’s done
00:40:00 all of my books he’s actually working on a book for me right now awesome when you find somebody good you get somebody okay yeah so I I and then he knows the characters so he’s created the original one so if the next book has the same characters it just makes sense to go with the same person that’s awesome that’s awesome and and how long this whole journey on the author books and everything the first book of zakari that came out in 2020 so initially I was releasing like two two to three books a year wow and I had had to pull back cuz I was like whoa that’s a lot so cuz I was and
00:40:32 then I re-released Grandma hadie I re-released it as a coloring book and now I’m re-releasing it in Spanish my next book will probably be releasing in the summer the one he’s working on now so that’ll be my two for this year so I’ll be done that’s awesome you going to do a coloring book which you don’t see a lot of them yeah the coloring book is out already okay yeah you should do some puzzles what I’m working on is so the pictures if you look at the pictures the game memory where you flip the cards so the ice creams I’m making it a memory game okay so that’ll come out in Christmas
00:41:06 at Christmas time that’s what I’m saying you got it going on DJ you got something for Miss Smith before we let her take us out of here yeah I wanted to know if you had an idea to to write a book what’s the first steps that you need to do to you know to make that go into fruition so when it comes to books I’m always tell people I’m a dream writer so I dream and then I wake up and write so I tell people if it’s something and it keeps waking you up and you can’t forget it then it’s a book but you have to start writing you have to write stuff down even if you do like
00:41:49 voice recording take your ideas and put it down on paper or on a computer and walk away from it for a couple weeks and then walk back and if it still is warm on your heart then move forward with it cuz sometimes you have an idea and you put it down and then when you walk away you come back and you like that don’t even make sense I don’t want to do that like I want to do that right like the book I was working on before Grandma hadie I’ve never released that book it’s still sitting on my computer cuz I just don’t it didn’t sing to me yet so if you want to write a book put the ideas down
00:42:24 walk away from it and then come back to it and if it’s still seem like it’s a thing then move forward but make sure you’re telling the story that you want to tell like I’ve had people call me like oh write a book about this I don’t know that I can’t write I I don’t know anything about that that’s not a story for me to write that’s I was going to ask you have you thought about writing anything other has anything came to you that you other than like the children thing that you think I might want to write I’m I’m really playing with the idea of writing young adult
00:42:52 stories I’m I’m playing with that cuz that’s what I used to read when I was growing up so playing with that idea I’m not sure yet and what’s a young adult story like a short chapter book okay so I’m playing with the idea I don’t know because that that just takes a lot more time a lot more time and a lot more Focus yeah praying about it we’ll see I imagine you work it out you’ve been doing pretty good you thought about animation taking one of your books and making a short cartoon or short film or make it actually children’s show or anything like that yes so someone approached
00:43:29 me about the zakari series because I always tell people he’s like the Curious George but in kid version the first book he went to college the next visit he went to a carnival and got lost and so I had somebody approach me about making that kind of a cartoon but then Gracie’s Corner Dro and I was like oh I can’t compete with Gracie oh I think you’ll be all right you got your own man I said we we’ll see we’ll see if I think that’s a good idea it speaks to and and the way technology is today that will be very that fiber turn anything into anything if it’s heavy on your heart and you
00:44:06 desire I know it’ll come and the way technology is and everybody they all into those shorts so any of that stuff will work and and one thing is for sure I I will tell this that the parents that are really involved with their kids no matter what level it is they spend whatever and we do whatever we can for our kids and so if they’re if you had a a c story of M it was a short film or a short little thing they’ll be sitting there with their little iPads watching it after they watch their especially if it’s one that’s black because there’s not many of that out there I’m open to it
00:44:40 like I said I the ideas come and I’ve been riding this Grandma hatti train for a minute the first book released in 2020 so to still be able to make the kind of traction that I’m making with districts all over the country like I in Georgia is now in all of their Library so it’s in all libraries in Ohio but now it’s in the libraries in Georgia and the book came out in 2020 so you can do a lot with grandma hadie that’s how got started went to college M went to church but went to jail grandma go just won an international impact award so I’ll be going to Phoenix in April
00:45:17 to accept that Miss Hat can go hey you know what’s crazy I call her Miss Hat is because my daughters went to a daycare and it was right across the street from our house in the lady’s name is Miss Hattie I didn’t know it was so many Hades until I wrote that book and I get a lot of book orders and people wanted autograph to Hatty this or Grandma hat and Auntie Hatty I’m like I didn’t know it was so many hatties it’s a lot of hatties out that’s why that’s why I was thinking about Miss Hattie and she was across the street from us and all the kids in the neighborhood went
00:45:47 there miss Hattie so listen it was a pleasure having you on our show see we buzzed right on we stay right on time we did very awesome and answered all our questions did good there like I said if we close our program I want you to take a look at this camera this is yours I want you to take your time tell the people what they need to know but more importantly let them know how they can get in touch about the Thousand ties if they want to donate if they want to be a part of that let them know where they can get all your books and how they can get online and where they can
00:46:16 get that stuff from and anything else you take your time give it to the camera and we going to push that out for you okay one thing that I always like to tell people is when it comes to our youth you a lot of them are just looking for someone to see them and I know we’re all busy and we all have life going on but just take a couple minutes and find a youth and just listen to them they’re humans they’re people and they feel alone in a lot of situations just a little bit of your time could make the difference in someone’s life be able to meet them where they are and give back we’re all
00:46:50 busy so just it’s about making that commitment to pour back into those who we want to see do well and for our annual event is February 8th registration is open this is an event you don’t want to miss we have judge Michael Ryan that will be there Micah Dixon is going to be there we have some amazing things lined up and the event is 100% free we’ll have free everything free food free coats free books free toys just everything is free so you don’t have to wor about anything catch a uber come on up if you don’t have a ride back let us know we’ll make sure we get you a uber back so
00:47:27 just make sure you’re in the building we want you there all of my books are available on my website joans smith.com you can also get them on Amazon walmart.com target.com Barnes & noble.com so you can get my books anywhere you can check them out of any library in Ohio but I prefer you purchase a book from me that’ be great excellent so again we’re going to have all the links to where you can reach and get reach all Miss Jaan um Smith and we’ll have links to where you can get all of her stuff in the description and our YouTube link so again we’ll see you next week peace