In this episode of Fur & Cocoa, we open up about the emotional cost of being the “strong African daughter.”
From the pressure to be perfect, to carrying responsibilities beyond our age, to navigating mental health in households where “feelings” weren’t always a safe topic — this conversation gets real, raw, and deeply personal.
We talk about:
✨ What it meant to grow up African in America
✨ The silent expectations placed on immigrant daughters
✨ High achievement, guilt, and being “the reliable one”
✨ How African parenting shaped our emotional world
✨ The mental health struggles we never had the language for
✨ Unlearning perfectionism and people-pleasing
✨ Healing the inner African daughter we had to suppress
✨ Rewriting what strength looks like as adult women
This episode is for anyone who grew up in an African household, a strict immigrant home, or between two cultures — trying to honor your family while healing yourself.
You are not alone, and you are not failing. You are becoming.
Grab your cocoa, settle in, and let’s talk about it. 🤎
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