Part of my mission as an author is to ask critically relevant and often tough questions to uncover the past and connect it with our present experiences. One of these questions is: What is generational wealth?
When we think of generational wealth, most of us immediately consider financial inheritance—money, property, or businesses passed down through families. If your state is like mine, the comptroller issues an annual listing of unclaimed bank accounts. I check every year, to no avail. One can hope.
When we view wealth solely through a financial lens, though, we unintentionally exclude a significant portion of people, especially Black people, who were historically barred from accumulating wealth in traditional ways. From being exploited as free labor to being denied access to quality education and higher-paying jobs, Black Americans faced immense barriers to financial prosperity. While overcoming these barriers was not impossible, the achievement gap was often substantial.
Limiting wealth to a purely financial definition also blinds us to the wealth we already possess—in our bloodlines, in our stories. Through the journey of writing KIN: ROOTED IN HOPE, Jeffery and I began to broaden our understanding of generational wealth.
Access to the history of our enslaved ancestors is itself a form of generational wealth. Not because they were able to preserve their stories, but because their enslavers, in their cold calculus, kept detailed records of what they considered their “property.” These records allow us to trace the past, reclaim our heritage, and carry the strength of our ancestors with us.
Through poetry and art, in KIN, Jeffery and I explore these ideas of wealth, equity, and access. For us, telling my family’s story is part of a broader mission to expand the narrative of generational wealth beyond just financial capital and into the deeper, richer inheritance of identity, resilience, and hope.
This month, we celebrate the one-year anniversary of KIN: ROOTED IN HOPE. It’s been an incredible journey sharing my family’s story with the world, and I’m thrilled to announce the release of the paperback edition. I hope this new format will continue to bring these important stories to new readers and remind us all of the true wealth we carry in our roots. That wealth is yours to claim!
Download the KIN reading guide and ponder your own family’s wealth.