- 9 months ago
http://junialegacy.com/
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A Legacy Born in Love. A Movement Rooted in Matriarchy. For centuries, sons who shared their father’s name were honored with the title “Junior.” But daughters—though just as worthy—were never given a generational marker of identity.
Dr. Tamara Nall Ezeanii is a visionary leader and legacy-builder who believes that names carry divine purpose. Her creation of the Junia™ naming tradition is rooted in her love for her future daughter, her reverence for lineage, and her desire to honor the identity of women across generations.
“This is more than a name—it’s a movement of legacy.”
— Dr. Tamara Nall Ezeanii
“It’s a mirror, a mantle, and a message for every daughter who carries her mother’s strength in her name.”
— Dr. Tamara Nall Ezeanii
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™Yaya Diamond
Red Hot Reality Ent. LLC
instagram.com/junialegacy
TikTok
tiktok.com/@junialegacy?_t=ZS-8vi1aRS3HjW&_r=1
Website
junialegacy.com
www.youtube.com/@JuniaLegacy
tiktok
@junialegacy
A Legacy Born in Love. A Movement Rooted in Matriarchy. For centuries, sons who shared their father’s name were honored with the title “Junior.” But daughters—though just as worthy—were never given a generational marker of identity.
Dr. Tamara Nall Ezeanii is a visionary leader and legacy-builder who believes that names carry divine purpose. Her creation of the Junia™ naming tradition is rooted in her love for her future daughter, her reverence for lineage, and her desire to honor the identity of women across generations.
“This is more than a name—it’s a movement of legacy.”
— Dr. Tamara Nall Ezeanii
“It’s a mirror, a mantle, and a message for every daughter who carries her mother’s strength in her name.”
— Dr. Tamara Nall Ezeanii
https://podopshost.com/yayadiamond
⚡ VidChapter AI generated these chapters, try it out https://vidchapter.com/?affiliate=yayadiamond
Recommended podcast platform get 10% off: https://podopshost.com/register/?ref=yaya
Tools and Services I use:
Appsumo has the best lifetime deals ever!!! I love this site.
appsumo.8odi.net/yayadiamond
The easiest way to make your graphics: https://buff.ly/2RTQLn0
Best website for musicians. Try it for free on me: https://buff.ly/2GMYugG
Make money with Fiverr.com: https://buff.ly/2KjTVvV
Our Amazon store: https://buff.ly/34RYNlm
DISCLAIMER: Links included in this description might be affiliate links. If you purchase a product or service with the links that I provide I may receive a small commission. My affiliate links usually provide either a free trial or discount so go try them out on me! Thank you for supporting DreamChasersRadio.com so I can continue to provide you with free content each week!
Privacy Policy: https://buff.ly/2XSrflS
™Yaya Diamond
Red Hot Reality Ent. LLC
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TVTranscript
00:00Hey guys, it's me, Yaya Diamond. What's up, peoples? How you doing? It is a great day and
00:20I'm so very excited to be here. I have an amazing guest on the show. You know I am biased. I have
00:24the best guests ever, okay? Ever. Listen to her. She's laughing at me, but it's true. I do. You
00:31know why I have the best guests? Because we're real people going for real goals, doing our real
00:35thing and making real money doing it. Hello! And I got my doctor on the show, but I want to welcome
00:42her. We want to explore inspiring stories and powerful movements shaping our culture today.
00:47And in this episode, we are honored to speak with the visionary founder of, and I hope I'm saying
00:53this, right? Junia or Junia? Junia. Huh? Junia. Junia. Okay. Legacy. Dr. Tamara, Niall, and girl,
01:03I'm going to mess up your last name. Just say it. Azani. That's my husband. Azani. Thank you. I'm not
01:09going to put her on here yet because I want to formally say it because I am terrible with names.
01:14I really am. So she is a groundbreaking movement that ratifies how daughters carry forth their
01:20mother's name and legacy by introducing the feminine suffix, Junia. All right? Their first,
01:26the first ever generational marker for daughters akin to the traditional Junior used on sons. So it'd be
01:33like, if I did use my real name, my given name that my mother named me, it would be Kimberly, Michelle,
01:40Thomas, Ramos, McFerrin, go figure, Junia. And I just, yeah, but don't, don't get into that. And don't
01:48ask me how I came up with all of those names because I could add more. All right. Rooting in
01:54love, matriarchy, and spiritual heritage, Junia empowers women across generations to honor identity,
02:00lineage, and strength in a way that's never been done before. I want to dive right in and welcome
02:06her to the show. Thank you so much for being here. Dr. Tamara, how are you? I'm doing well,
02:12Dr. Yaya and you. I'm doing good. Awesome. Thank you for having me. Oh my gosh. So I thank you for
02:20being on the show. I mean, okay. So I have to ask you, how did you do this? What, what made you like
02:27go into getting a suffix for the female? Because most of us, most women, like I, I kind of didn't,
02:35but most women don't keep their last name. They get the last name of their husbands. Um, a lot of,
02:41uh, family members want to have like two girls in the family, like junior or, but it's, it's kind
02:46of difficult to be like a junior for a female. So how did you come up with this? Yes. We're going
02:52right in. So basically, you know, I think that everything starts out of an experience or whether
03:01it be joy or pain. And so I am, in addition to being the founder and creator of the Junia naming
03:08tradition, I'm also a serial entrepreneur. I'm an investor and all of my life, I have focused on
03:15my professional career, all of that. I'm like, okay, when I'm ready to start a family and I knew
03:21I always wanted to be a mother, that was a goal of mine as well. You know, that would happen. But no
03:26one told me that as you age, your egg quality for a woman decreases. No one ever told me that.
03:32Yeah. Um, we, they don't tell us that we didn't talk about that. You know, we talk about everything
03:38else in class, even like how to have a work life balance and happiness and wellbeing and joy,
03:44but no one talks about the family and your dreams and aspirations to start a family. So when my husband
03:50and I decided to start a family, we actually tried many times, um, you know, naturally through IVF
03:58and no embryos were viable. And so that was a very sad, depressing time for me. I'm, you know,
04:05my mother passed away in 2015. So 10, 10 years actually to this month. And I just was like trying
04:13to battle with my mother, not being here. Everybody needs a mother, you know, where you have children
04:20or a mother figure. And I wanted my mother, she was the most awesome mom ever. And so I was sad and
04:25depressed and I prayed about it. And God told me that I got so much more than just the genetics
04:32and the genetic footprint that my parents taught me how to be a good global citizen, how to work hard,
04:38how to love people, you know, all those things. And so I was okay with that. Then, or I said I was okay
04:46with that, but then I thought, you know, no, I want something tangible. I want something tangible.
04:50And my husband and I have seven embryos, four females, three males. And I talked to him and I
04:57said, you know what? I wanted to name my first daughter, our future daughter, my name. I want
05:01to give her my name, Tamara Nall Azani. Um, and then I started doing research and I was thinking to
05:08myself, okay, well, is there a formal equivalent to junior? And there is none. In fact, historically,
05:16you can't even determine who actually created junior. There is no traceable. And so I did research
05:22in different combinations and came up with junior. And so that, that's how I came up with it through
05:29my own struggles with realizing that, um, my family creation was not as I thought it would be.
05:40Right. Did you ever have a child? Um, I have not birthed the child. I do not.
05:46Um, we do have embryos. Now I'm a bonus mother to many, you know, um, which is a journey that many
05:53women go on. Yeah. Whether they have children or not. And so my husband, um, has a daughter. We
06:01have a daughter. She's my bonus daughter. She calls me her bonus mom. We talk often. She calls me about
06:08relationship issues, school issues, professional issues. And I entered her life when she was 14.
06:14And, um, so she's wonderful. And actually she has a son now she's close to 30. She has a son now. So
06:22I'm a Mimi too. Oh goodness. I would meet me too. Yes, baby. Yes. I am. I have my nephew. Um,
06:31he's 14 and he and I travel. We do a trip every year. Sometimes we sneak into, but we do a trip
06:37every year. And so I'm a mother figure to him as well. Um, but now I'm at a point in life where
06:43we're going to start our family and, um, our first little daughter will be a junior.
06:50That was so good. I'm so happy for you. And I understand your plight. Like my, like someone,
06:55someone in my family, I'm not going to name him because I don't know if they are going to be
06:58comfortable with me saying anything, but they could not have children. Um, there was just no way that
07:04she could have children. So whichever family member didn't want their kids in our family,
07:10like they had kids too young or they just didn't want the child and they couldn't raise a child.
07:14She raised them. I think she raised like 10 kids so far. Oh yeah. And so she's had her plight of
07:21children. You know what I mean? And she's got more right now in the house that are young. Um,
07:26and she's raising them, you know what I mean? So it's like, I understand where you're coming from
07:30and bonus moms and stuff like that. You know, she, she was just, she's just an amazing person.
07:35And she did give her gift of motherhood to the children that she did raise. So, I mean,
07:41you know, I understand that bonus. So let me ask you a question. What is it like to actually compose
07:47a name that is significant or viable or has that equivalent of junior for a young lady? Because,
07:56you know, like I said before, young ladies don't have this, but they should, but now they do.
08:01This is amazing. Tell me about this. Thank you. So basically in terms of, of it is very powerful.
08:09I mean, you had mentioned earlier, you said, you know, a woman could choose to take her husband's
08:13name, her last name or not. And with junior, it doesn't matter. If you choose to have your first
08:19name, your middle name and keep your maiden name. If you choose to have your first name,
08:24your middle name and take your husband's last name, junior operates exactly like junior. And that is
08:31you have the identical name of the father. So if the daughter has the identical name of the mother,
08:37you can have junior. And so in my case, it would be, um, Tamara, Nall, Azani, comma, J U N I A or
08:45comma J N. And that is, it is really that simple. And so basically, and, you know, to your point,
08:53like now with technology and, you know, with everything modern science is out there,
08:59people are creating families. I have friends now that are adopting and naming the child.
09:05I have friends that are going through IVF, be it a donor egg or a donor sperm or their egg and
09:11our friends, you know, like people are creating the families that they want to. And I'm finding
09:18more and more that people love this. I created this for myself. I'm going to be honest. It was a selfish
09:24thing. Like I want something I'm going to name my daughter after me. But now that we have officially
09:29launched, now that this is a movement and change. And the first time ever, I never thought I would
09:36be sitting, you know, here on this stage with you or anywhere saying that I was the first to ever do
09:41anything. But it is, and we've gotten so much support. We actually had, um, what we call junior
09:51supporters. So we had a video shoot and a photo shoot. And some of our junior models said that
09:57their next daughter, they're going to name after them. And I'm just in there said they couldn't
10:01even believe it. And there have been cases where women have taken either the first name or the last
10:08name, not the full name. We have like junior legacies and junior supporters and the junior circle.
10:15So no matter where you are, you can be in that junior community, you know, if you will. And so
10:23it started as a selfish thing for me, but now it's like grown and we still have a long ways to go.
10:29Now it's really around getting congressional support and resolutions, um, to actually get it to be passed
10:37so that passport services, social security administration as an option. So when you pick the
10:45suffix, you have JN or junior. And so that's kind of where we are now and doing a change.org petition,
10:52et cetera, um, to show the support that we have to actually make it official. And until it's official
10:59though, people can still name it. I mean, when you go and you have a child and you put it on your birth
11:04certificate, you can just even now say comma junior or comma JN. And then as we go and we get it more
11:11formalized through the proper channels, um, it will be there. And actually my research has shown,
11:18we actually have, um, in the U S about 30,000 daughters who are named after their mothers.
11:25Hmm. They just don't have the official suffix, but in terms of the naming it's there. Wow. Wow. So what is
11:34the empowerment behind junior? What is the fascination and, and have, have people actually
11:40picked up junior and what are their responses? Well, in terms of it being so fresh and so new.
11:46So I officially launched it on my 50th birthday. Oh, go ahead. So we're, we're just in this a couple
11:53of months. Um, as I mentioned, yes, people are picking up on it. People are already deciding that,
12:01you know, when their daughter is born or when they have their next daughter, they are going to use
12:06junior as a suffix, but in terms of it being officially named, I mean, not even mine, we're
12:10in the process with our embryos starting that. Right. Um, so in fact, my daughter might not be the
12:15first official junior. Wow. He's born, there'll be others. And that's okay because now we have that,
12:22but it is a movement. It's the first time ever, like ever in all eternities of eternities where we have
12:28a formal naming convention that is equivalent to junior. For centuries, we've had men named after,
12:35you know, you have the junior and then, um, you know, um, second, third, et cetera, same thing,
12:41junior, second, third, like that will be official for, for us as well. Um, and it's really, really
12:48exciting. And it's, it's a movement that particularly during this time, we can all get around and we can
12:53all support. I mean, whether you're talking about, um, motherhood or family lineage or, you know,
13:02equality, you know, however you want to do it, whichever side you're on, we can all gather around
13:08something and we need wins. We need to have something that we can all kind of garner around
13:12and build. And it's also really important because we're also for some of us, particularly me and my
13:20network, we're at this age where we're kind of like in the sandwich community, we're losing our
13:26grandparents, we're losing our parents. Um, and people are really having this question of how can
13:33I keep that past? How can I remember my mother? How can I do, you know, all of that? And, and, and then
13:41they're also trying to think about one day, at least I have particularly when I lost my mother
13:46and as my father is aging now, you know, life is finite. Um, it's very, very finite. And so you
13:53find people grasping for ways to actually remember the past and the present and to preserve that in
14:01the future. And Junia allows that. Let me tell you, you hit it on the nail girlfriend. It's like,
14:07okay, so why do I have to lose my name? Don't I come from a particular lineage where, you know,
14:15in Cuba, what they do was they put the family last name and then they would put the mother's last name
14:22so that no one loses the last name. Like it goes on, but in the United States, you lose everything.
14:28You lose your name, you lose everything. And it's just so sad, you know? And so some women are buying
14:33to not do that. What they're doing is they're keeping their last name and they're adding on
14:37their merit name. So they're doing hyphenated names now, which is something that's becoming
14:41very popular. But you know, it's, it's that, it's that, that heritage, that, that, that connection.
14:47You're right. Cause I lost my dad and I believe 2018 or 2019, I can't even think now. It's like,
14:53it's been a stepfather in 21. I lost my mom last year. And so it's like, what else? There's no one
15:01else except aunties and uncles. There's really no one else that I can, you know? So you don't want
15:07to lose that heritage, especially as a woman, you know, you lose, you lose everything. You become
15:12this vessel to bring new life into the world. You become mom, you become everything to everyone else.
15:17But what about yourself? Right. What about you? What about your name? What about what you want?
15:25And, and, you know, and your mom, you know, what about your mom? Yeah. Yeah. She gave up women,
15:31give up their whole lives. It's just something that we can grasp onto and hold onto for our lives.
15:37Cause you were right. It's finite. So what kind of, what kind of ceremony is there? You have a
15:43ceremony, right? Is there a junior ceremony? So if you go to our website, you can find a number of
15:50things. Um, the best and the most important is registering so that you can get all the good
15:56information and update information. But what we have is a declaration of rights. And so that can
16:01be printed and framed. We also have an official certificate. So similar to a birth certificate,
16:07we have a junior naming certificate and you can go in and it has fillable spaces and you can fill out
16:13the name and your name. And then we have a sample, um, naming ceremony because it, it, it is quite
16:20important and you don't have to be like an official officiant, if you will, to do that, even like you
16:26would for a wedding. It is the part that it could be the mother. It could be the father. It could be a
16:33God person. It doesn't matter. It's whoever you want. And so we have in there suggested wording,
16:38honoring, um, honoring, as you'll see there on the screen, honoring the first of her name. We also have
16:43ideas of how to incorporate things that are important to you. It could be candles. It could
16:49be a photo. It could be whatever it is. And the purpose is to give you just an idea and to inspire
16:55you for, um, for, for inspiration for your own naming ceremony, but it can totally be changed
17:03because yes, it's just to kind of give you some food for thought, some creativity to
17:09infuse and you take that and you change it. There is no copyright with this. Um, it should be very
17:15personal, um, because it is a legacy and it's something that, you know, your daughters are you
17:22yourself will, um, you know, take with you into the future. And, you know, I'm even encouraging people.
17:29If you're like, you know what? I don't really like the name I have. I want to change it and do my mother's
17:34name. Yeah. There you go. And I was going to say that I was going to be like, okay, so what if you're
17:39like my age? You know, I'm 52 years old. We're, we're not too far apart and I want to go ahead and change
17:45my name. I could, I could do that. You can totally do that. You know what I mean? So, I mean, this is to honor the
17:54mothers. Cause there's so much honor going out to junior. Like my dad was a junior. So his name was
17:59James. I forget his middle name. Cause you know, but James McFerrin Jr. And then there was senior,
18:06you know what I mean? So it's like, it gives you like this, this, this, this feeling of just
18:12importance, you know, and then you have the girls, you know, and, and boys, males are so proud.
18:20Oh yeah. They're so proud of being a junior. And now we can be proud of being a junior.
18:26That's it. And, and to me, it's, it's actually more honored to be honest. And I, maybe I'm being
18:31biased, but it is, but I think that it is because you know, our mothers have did so much. We as mothers
18:39do so much. And so I just think it is amazing. And it is inspired from Romans 16, seven. There was an
18:46apostle junior. She's only mentioned one time in the Bible, but Paul says she was outstanding. She
18:52was in prison for her, her beliefs. And so to me, that really went to the honor of it and,
19:00and the inheritance, the identity and, and, and all of that. But I mean, we have just gotten so much
19:06momentum around it. I'm really, really excited. Like I said, the journey is just beginning in terms
19:10of making it official, official, but the beauty is we have a lot of control, even when, when,
19:16when our daughters are born or what have you put it on the birth certificate now. And that helps
19:22because then when we do go to show Congress women and me and this, then they can already see kind
19:30of like the influx of people that are supporting it and who doesn't want to win in their local community.
19:34Exactly. Exactly. What, what kind of benefits do people get or what kind of resources can you get
19:42when becoming a junior? Or do you have anything on your website? And I know these are kind of like
19:47two questions at once, but what do you get out of this? I mean, is it just like a financial thing?
19:52Is it something that you just really wanted to do? Can people support the movement financially or,
19:57or even kind of like putting it on their page or, I mean, what can be done to get this out there even more?
20:03You know, I have been asked that a lot. They're like, okay, what's the business behind this?
20:09You know, how can you make money off of this, et cetera, et cetera. I am not at the point of making
20:14money on it. It's more of, it's more of just this movement and this legacy that I wanted to create.
20:24So we're not at a point to like monetize anything. My total goal is to just get it
20:31formalized so that we have junior, just like we've had a junior. Now, I mean, I'm also not
20:39one to just do something and just do go, you know, just bare bones with it. I am a type A person.
20:46So I'm sure in the future there will be, I mean, there's just so much that can come out of this.
20:50Yeah. In terms of, you know, I don't know, collectible dolls and an animation and, you know,
20:56all those different things. And that probably will come because I'm a creative and I'm always thinking
21:02about, you know, to the, to the moon and doing as much as I can. But right now it is just a movement
21:10of something that is long overdue. And that's kind of where I am. It's a, a movement project.
21:16It's a passion project. And there is no, there are no business ties to it. Um, at all. Although
21:23people tell me, I need to be thinking about that right now. I just want the ability of all of the
21:28stories that people are coming, reaching out to me and telling me, um, I have a line sister.
21:35Her husband's mother was named word for word, name by name, first, middle and last
21:42get the same name as, as his grandmother and they passed away. And so he doesn't know this.
21:48So I'm not going to give him this link until after, but we're actually honoring what we're
21:52calling legacy juniors. And so he will receive on behalf of his mother, who is considered what we're
21:58calling legacy junior, a necklace medallion, um, for her. And I've done research and I have found
22:06folks that are both living and have passed away. And so if they're living, I'm reaching out to them
22:11and I'm going to present them with this medallion that they can have. And if they've passed away,
22:16I'm going to go to the, the closest living relative, give that to them. So to answer your question,
22:23the benefit is being able to, for junior to be marked in time as your daughter being named
22:30after the mother, that is the benefit there. There is no financial benefit. And if people are
22:35just dying and passionate to contribute, just, you know, reach out to me. Um, the email is junior,
22:42J U N I a at junior legacy.com. And we'll figure something out. Anything that comes in is going to
22:48go right back out anyway, um, into the community. So, but that's kind of, that's kind of where,
22:54where, where I am on this. Yeah. I absolutely love that. I absolutely love that. I think that
22:59that is beautiful. And you know, what father wouldn't want to honor the mother by giving their
23:09daughter the mother's name? Exactly. Exactly. To me, that is an easy discussion. So let's not do the
23:17same thing for, for junior. It's a no brainer. It's going to be a very hard discussion. You,
23:22you've already agreed to a junior and then you're going to say no to a junior to me. Yeah. I kind of,
23:29it's like a no brainer and I love it. I'm going to put all that information in the description box,
23:34but I want to make sure that people understand that this is a movement. It is something that you
23:39have, have come up with out of the goodness of your heart to actually give a legacy to the girls that
23:46are born so that the boys can be juniors and the girls can be juniors. And that to me is just
23:52beautiful because that gives you something else. It's like, like you said, the grandmother's name,
23:58you know, maybe you want it word for word. So she would be a junior. And it's like junior,
24:04junior is beautiful. I think it's great. I think it's wonderful. Thank you. And you do not have to have a
24:10middle name. It's just the name, whether it's just first and last, as long as it's identical,
24:14then, then you are technically a junior. That's it. And you know what? And I wanted to go really quick
24:20because I saw your, your, your, um, your certificate, right? So the certificate is here.
24:25And so it says read the founder's declaration, right? Start your own, uh, junior legacy and download
24:30the certificate. So I wanted to go here really quick and look at that certificate. Can you see that?
24:35Yes. This is beautiful because you can have a ceremony, just like the ceremony of when,
24:43you know, when you have, um, uh, you know, the, the christening. Yep. So you have the christening,
24:49you can actually have this at the christening and have this certificate done at the same time.
24:57Yep. You can, and you can download it for free. Yep. Absolutely. All that is, again,
25:02this is about the legacy and the movement, no, you know, capitalization or commercialization or
25:07anything. Um, this is just that. And I wanted to make it easy. You know, sometimes in life
25:13you, you have these efforts or these initiatives and it's just so hard to do the basics. So I'm like,
25:18okay, let's just give them this. And then they can go, you know, go from there and customize it.
25:23We don't want it to be so structured where it's like, okay, in order to be a junior,
25:27you must have the ceremony this way. No, no, you should have it. And if it is the christening
25:32and the only thing you have is the certificate and the mention of it, then that's enough because
25:37it is about that. And I would encourage everyone, you know, like I said, life is so fleeting.
25:44And so for me, I wish I had more, you know, I wasn't named after my mother, but Lord knows I have all
25:50of her, her DNA and her characteristics. I wish I had more photos and more videos. And so
25:56the name is the beginning. Junior is the beginning is then how do we archive?
26:01How do we document our lives so that when we are long and gone and we left whatever mark
26:07our children and our children's children and their children's children can go back and have all of
26:11these articles from the certificate, the video of the naming ceremony, the video of just life and
26:16going out and having fun and the laughs and the tears and all of that so that they can watch it too.
26:21And remember from whence they came and that's important. I, you know, I know I'm prolonging
26:27this. It's just to me, this is just beautiful. And I want to go ahead and mention that you do have
26:32that naming ceremony. The paperwork is there on the website. People can download that for free as well.
26:38But what I love about this is that you give them how to do it. When, when to hold the ceremony,
26:43it's either at the hospital at home and during a christening, a baptism, a child dedication service,
26:48you know what I mean? A public or private naming. Um, but what I love is that you actually give them
26:54a template honoring the first name to formally honor a daughter who carries the exact name of
26:59her mother with the legacy title junior, which is J and signifying the continuation of the mayor trickle
27:08uh, lineage and purpose. And I'm, and not only did you do that, but you put a mother's vow in here
27:14to me. You done it. You did it. That's just right there. Cause I'm a mom, you know, and we're all mothers
27:22in a sense, you know, and it's like, okay, if you're a mother of you've mothered someone, you don't have to
27:28birth someone to be a mom. Oh, absolutely. Okay. And you've mothered someone, you know, what a mother's vow
27:35means. It's like all the way till the end of my, my days to my breath, you know what I mean?
27:41This is what it is. And I just, I think it's beautiful what you've done. Yeah. And we, and
27:46mothers do that anyway, you know, sacrifice, you know, their, their time and sacrifice themselves
27:52for the love of a child. And in this case of a daughter. So I just think it's, it's beautiful.
27:57It's beautiful. Definitely. It's beautiful. And I want to thank you so much. I'm going to go ahead and
28:02put the, it's, it's junior legacy.com J U N I a legacy.com that you want to go ahead and go
28:10and check out. I was reading that. I want to make sure that I say that properly, but we'll have that
28:14link in the description box below. If you want to do a junior ceremony and you don't really understand
28:20how to do it, you can always reach out to doc Dr. Tamara and she will help you through, but everything
28:26is pretty much on the website. If you do have some kind of, uh, you know, disability, like you can't
28:31read it or, uh, you can't hear it, you need braille or whatever. I'm sure that we can,
28:36Dr. Tamara can help you out with that. Um, because I think that no one should be, uh, disabled enough
28:43to actually do this. If you want to do this, by all means, by all means, you know, this is beautiful.
28:49Dr. Tamara, thank you so much for being on the show. I appreciate it. Thank you. Thank you for having me.
28:55Thank you for your platform. And thank you to all the supporters and those that are listening.
29:00We have the website. We're also have a YouTube channel, channel junior legacy. We have TikTok,
29:05Facebook, Instagram, junior or junior legacy. And, um, the most important is to kind of register.
29:11We have a link that says to join the movement so we can keep you updated. And we have our petition
29:17because that's really the most important thing. We can talk about this all day, but let's make it
29:20formal so that finally in the first time in history, we can have, um, the female equivalent and have junior.
29:26Yeah. Definitely. I appreciate that. And I appreciate what you've done. You've given selfishly,
29:31selfishly, how is it? Selflessly, but selfishly too, because you said it was all about you.
29:36And I gotta be honest, this is about me, you know? Yeah. And then I'm like, wait a minute,
29:43this is bigger than I am, particularly when people came to me. So yeah, it's beyond me now,
29:47but it didn't have its roots in, in me wanting something. Definitely. And I wish I would have
29:52known back in the day, you know, that this was available because a lot of people now looking at
29:57it going, man, you know, but Hey, you can actually start by giving this out to people by letting them
30:04know that there is a junior and by sharing the website. So that way this can get out to as many
30:09people as possible so that they can understand that they can now honor their mothers, their grandmothers,
30:13you know what I mean? And the, the motherly lineage that, you know, we so, so deserve to,
30:19to have in our lives and to continue. So I want to thank you guys so much. And I want to thank you,
30:23Dr. Tamara. Thank you guys so much for tuning in. Don't forget to dare to be different, but most of
30:28all, don't forget to check in that box down there below and check out that website for you. And if you
30:33truly, truly want to give something, I mean, if you really want to donate, just get in touch with her.
30:38I'm sure she'll take your money. We will go and we will follow up and let you know how the,
30:44how the funds were used. There you go. All right guys, until next time, don't forget to dare to
30:48be different. Bye. Thank you for watching.
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