my work is rooted in the belief that our bodies hold wisdom, our desires are valid, and our freedom is non-negotiable
i want Black women to be well paid. i want us negotiating the salaries we deserve, building companies, leading organizations, moving money, and shaping the direction of the world around us. i want us funded, resourced, and financially secure in ways our grandmothers were often denied.
“liberation, to me, has never been just one thing. it’s the ability to live fully inside yourself.”
brianne patrice cash
is a nationally recognized women’s rights advocate and nonprofit leader committed to advancing the healing, safety, and liberation of Black women and femmes—particularly those who are single or under-supported moms, sexual assault survivors, and domestic violence victims. since 2024, as founder and Executive Director of the Black Healing Collective, she has drawn on over a decade of advocacy experience and abolitionist care principles to build a community-rooted organization serving Black women impacted by systemic inequities, raising over $30,000 to date.
through the Coven, the Collective’s flagship initiative, she facilitates direct support by connecting Black women to rent assistance and access to therapy.
her leadership spans the nonprofit, editorial, and creative sectors, including nearly five years as Executive Director of Sad Girls Club and her current role as Fractional Marketing Director of Black Girls Smile. a writer at heart, Brianne previously served as Publication Editor at Black Girl In Om, where she grew readership and amplified stories at the intersection of Black womanhood, wellness, and spirituality. she is the author of Holy & Whore: Erotic Embodiment as a Means to Overcome Narcissistic Abuse (forthcoming).
her work has been featured in KEYS Soulcare, ,Life, I Swear (the podcast), Essence, Hypebae, xoNecole, and more. she has collaborated with brands including Refinery29 x Target, Black Girl In Om, Create & Cultivate, and Maybelline, and has spoken on panels hosted by SoHo House, Sad Girls Club, Billionaire Girls Club, The Garden Society, and The Female Quotient x SXSW.
“there is a freedom—and a home—i have made in this body [of work].”
and freedom is not just philosophical to me—it’s practical. material. it’s essential.Black women deserve softer language. full stop.
abolitionist care
dismantling systems of harm and building frameworks that nurturelanguage and narrative justice
rejecting words that confine, embracing language that honorspleasure as ritual
creating spaces for play. expansion. and radical embodiment.
my guiding principles:
“i believe in economic justice, pleasure activism, and healing that centers our whole selves—not just the parts that make the world comfortable”
i believe magic is everywhere for those willing to notice it, and i love sharing that perspective with my audience. whether i’m shaping experiences, writing a story, or building spaces for Black women to rest, play, and reclaim—i infuse everything with intention, care, and purpose. my goal is to create a platform that feels like a sanctuary—a place where our fullness is seen, celebrated, and never edited.
for me, it’s about crafting work that sparks joy, possibility, and connection. i want the small to feel expansive, the ordinary to feel revolutionary, and the everyday to remind us of our authority. together, we’re creating spaces, stories, and experiences that honor who we are—and what we deserve.