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Start with a question: who is the woman who changed your life? We set out to honor Women’s History Month by pulling together the names you know, the names history buried, and the names you carry at your kitchen table. From Harriet Tubman’s precision under fire to Ida B. Wells’s fearless reporting, we trace the blueprint of courage that built movements and made room for the rest of us.

We widen the frame with Claudette Colvin’s first stand, Rosa Parks’s trained resolve, and Dorothy Height’s decades of steady leadership. Then we leave the marches for the math labs: Mae Jemison’s path to space, Katherine Johnson, Dorothy Vaughan, and Mary Jackson calculating trajectories in segregated rooms that still put people safely into orbit. Henrietta Lacks anchors a hard truth—modern medicine owes a debt to a Black woman whose cells changed the world without her consent—pushing us to pair innovation with ethics and equity.

Culture and politics echo this arc. Toni Morrison wrote the books the canon refused to make, Shirley Chisholm ran unbought and unbossed, and Kamala Harris took an oath that carried three firsts at once. Through it all, we keep returning home. The spirit that moved history also lives in mothers, grandmothers, teachers, and friends who worked two jobs, gave the warning that later saved you, and prayed when control was gone. We end with a simple challenge: don’t just post—call her, text her, tell her she’s seen. If this conversation moved you, subscribe, share it with someone who needs the reminder, and leave a review to help more listeners find these stories.

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