Black women are leaving the workforce in staggering numbersâan exodus with deep, lasting implications. Leilani dives into why this is a crisis, what it means for families and the nation, and what happens when so many are missing from leadership, stability, and the future table.
Chapter 1
Leilani Anderson-Monroe
Hey yâall, welcome back to Leilaniâs Couch: Ten Minutes of Motivation. Settle in, because today weâre peeling back the curtain on a crisis thatâs been heavy on my mindâand honestly, a bit under everyoneâs radar: Nearly 300,000 Black women have vanished from the workforce in just the last few months. I mean, thatâs not just a headline, itâs a woundâone thatâs bleeding all over our families, our communities, and really, the country as a whole. If I sound a little fired up, itâs because I am. You know, I was sitting late in my office, reviewing some market dataâbecause yâall know, real estate is my bread and butterâand I kept noticing entire fields with fewer Black women on the payroll. Health care. Education. Retail. Even finance. The sectors weâve always shown up for, the spaces where Black women have historically been the backboneâgone. Look, itâs not just a âjobsâ issue, itâs a national one. When Black women disappear from these spaces, the whole system shifts, and itâs never for the better.
Chapter 2
Leilani Anderson-Monroe
But I want to zero in for a second and talk about what this means, up closeâlike, inside our own living rooms. When Black women lose work, itâs not just a statistic; itâs dinner tables that get quieter, rent payments that get missed, and dreams that get pressed on pause. I think about a mom I know in Atlantaâletâs call her Jasmine. She lost her job at the end of last year, and the dominoes started falling, quick. She went from a steady paycheck to scrambling for odd gigs, juggling childcare, hustling harder than ever just to keep the lights on. One lost job, but the impact? It echoes through her household: the kids, her parents, even the neighbor she used to help out. And itâs not just about paying bills, yâallâitâs the generational stuff, too. Less income for mom means less stability today, and a whole lot less to pass down tomorrow.
Chapter 3
Leilani Anderson-Monroe
And letâs be real: when Black women get squeezed out, it isnât only entry-level roles that thin outâitâs leadership, too. Talented, driven women just up and leaving or being nudged out of boardrooms, management teams, you name it. When we disappear from the top, mentorship dries up. Young women canât picture themselves leading if nobody like them sits at the table. I mean, just peek into a couple Fortune 500 companies and watch what happens when thereâs no Black woman in the boardroomâsuddenly, those innovative recruitment programs? Gone. Those community partnerships? Wandering. The impact ripples out, reshaping whole industries without us ever realizing what weâve lost until itâs too late.
Chapter 4
Leilani Anderson-Monroe
Another layerâand it stings because I see it every day as a brokerâthe racial wealth gap, yâall, it just gets wider when Black women step out of the workforce. The stats donât lie: every paycheck missed, every promotion denied, thatâs dollars lost not only today but down the road for generations. Picture this: two sisters, same background, but only one is able to stay employed while the other gets pushed out. Ten years later, their savings, their credit, even their kidsâ opportunities? Polar opposites. Weâre watching generations of wealthâfirst homes, college funds, the cushion that keeps families afloatâdry up in real time. And trust, that affects not just the sisters, but everybody tied to them.
Chapter 5
Leilani Anderson-Monroe
Now, letâs dig a little deeperâbecause none of this is happening in a vacuum. Itâs systemic. Rooted in biased hiring, pay disparities that never seem to close, and a serious lack of everyday support. There was a survey, not too long agoâBlack professionals reporting feeling isolated, overlooked, hit with microaggressions day in, day out. The message was clear: either you adapt and take it, or eventually, you get tired and leave. Sometimes we see organizations scramble for a quick fixâmaybe throw up a diversity initiative, give a surface-level trainingâbut yâall, is anything actually changing for real? Or are we just painting over cracks in the wall? Iâm just saying, the roots run deep, and we need deep, honest changeânot a fresh coat of paint.
Chapter 6
Leilani Anderson-Monroe
All of this isnât just numbers or policy talk; it eats at your mental and emotional well-being. Burnout and exhaustion donât even cover it some days. I remember a close friendâletâs call her Deniseâwho walked away from corporate life after years of stress and justâŠnot being seen. Like, she wasnât leaving work, she was leaving weight. Leaving microaggressions, leaving the exhaustion of always being the only or the âfirst.â But hereâs the tough part: how are organizations actually measuring this stuff? Are they even noticing, or is it just another line on the turnover report? We canât address a problem if we keep pretending it's invisibleâor worse, if we donât care enough to notice.
Chapter 7
Leilani Anderson-Monroe
What happens when income, influence, and leadership disappear from our neighborhoods? The impact radiates. Local nonprofits that once offered mentorship for young people now canât afford to keep their programs running, or the leaders themselves are goneâoff to survive somewhere else. That cultural heartbeat, the one powered by Black womenâfrom Sunday school to city councilâstarts to fade out. And Iâm not trying to be dramatic, but that loss? Itâs not just numbers on a spreadsheet; itâs less guidance, less celebration, less tradition for everyone in those spaces. We lose more than workers; we lose culture, legacy, togetherness⊠all of it.
Chapter 8
Leilani Anderson-Monroe
Representation matters. And when Black women are gone from the tables where decisions get made, the whole conversation shifts. Iâve seen high-profile initiatives at organizations justâŠfizzle out after the Black women leading them left. Itâs like the glue disappeared and suddenly, progress stalls. Sometimes an entire industry can miss its blind spots because thereâs nobody left willingâor even presentâto call it out. When weâre not in the room, things get missed. Perspectives get lost. The table just isnât the same.
Chapter 9
Leilani Anderson-Monroe
Now, I wonât just sit here and list problemsâbecause yâall know weâre about solutions on this couch. Thereâs work being done. Programs, networks, and policies helping Black women re-enter and actually stay in their fields are popping up all over. I gotta spotlight the Boss Women Network for a secondâour mission has always been to mentor, support, help you get back in the game, whether youâre returning after a break or never felt like you got a fair shot. But listen, real support means real change: intentional hiring, mentorship, pathways for promotion, and spaces where being yourself is the requirement, not the exception. What does meaningful support even look like? Itâs opportunity that comes with safety, with space to grow, not just survive.
Chapter 10
Leilani Anderson-Monroe
So where does all this take us? What kind of future are we buildingânot just for ourselves but for our daughters, our sisters, that next generation walking behind us? Community leaders Iâve talked to are shouting for policy changesâreal ones. Think paid leave, childcare, strong accountability on equity, and leadership pipelines that reach back as much as they reach up. Personally, I find myself thinking about what my own daughter is going to inherit. Not just a seat at the table, but a chair thatâs got her name carved into it. My hope is that these stories, these hard conversations, plant seeds for a future where Black women donât just show upâthey thrive, lead, and own every room they walk into. Thatâs the vision. Thatâs why these ten minutes matter. Thanks for sharing the couch with me today. Until next timeâkeep pouring into yourself, keep rising, and remember, youâre never alone on this journey.
About the podcast
"Leilaniâs Couch: Ten Minutes of Motivation" was born from Leilaniâs lifestyle shiftâto stop shrinking, start healing, and pour into herself while inspiring others. As a mom, real estate broker, producer, founder of Boss Women Network, and MBA holder, she brings quick, powerful episodes that realign and refuel. This isnât therapyâitâs real talk from a woman whoâs walked through fire and came out focused. Sometimes, all you need is ten minutes on the couch.