Mental Health & Wellness for Young People Who Deserve to Be Seen

Free, trauma-informed mental health and wellness programming for Black and BIPOC youth across Greater Boston.

Too many young people in Cambridge are falling through the cracks. They are navigating stress, trauma, identity, and systems that were never designed to support them — and too often they are getting in trouble, disengaging from school, and losing belief in their own future.

Majestic Community Wellness — in partnership with MBK Cambridge, the YWCA, and the Cambridge Community Center — is stepping in.

We are building safe, affirming, culturally grounded spaces where young people are seen, heard, and supported. Through trauma-informed yoga and mindfulness, healing circles, nervous-system regulation, social-emotional learning, and college and career support, we are helping young people get back on track — and back to believing that their future is real.

This is not another program. This is a community showing up for its young people — because the school system alone cannot do it, and these young people deserve better.

WHO THIS PROGRAM IS FOR

This program is designed specifically for Black, Indigenous, and BIPOC youth ages 14–18 across Greater Boston — young people who face the greatest gaps in culturally responsive mental health and wellness support.

We serve young people navigating:

  • Academic pressure and school-related stress

  • Anxiety, depression, and emotional dysregulation

  • Social isolation and disconnection

  • Exposure to community trauma and systemic inequity

  • Limited access to culturally responsive mental health care

All programming is free. No one is turned away.

How It Improves Learning Outcomes:

Research consistently demonstrates that trauma-informed, mind-body interventions improve the foundational capacities students need to learn — attention, emotional regulation, impulse control, and stress resilience. Healing to Learn addresses these directly through three pathways:

  • Nervous-system regulation — Breathwork and somatic movement reduce chronic stress activation, restoring the physiological state students need to focus and engage in learning

  • Social-emotional skill development — Each session builds core SEL competencies — self-awareness, self-management, relationship skills, and responsible decision-making

  • School connectedness and belonging — Community-building components strengthen students' sense of safety and belonging — a well-documented predictor of academic engagement and graduation rates

Healing to Learn is delivered in partnership with: MBK Cambridge (My Brother's Keeper Cambridge) · YWCA · Cambridge Community Center

Healing to Learn

Healing to Learn is MCW's first structured, curriculum-based youth wellness initiative — designed to improve learning readiness, social-emotional development, and school engagement for students of color in Greater Boston.

Developed in partnership with Dr. Bonnie Lo — a Harvard Graduate School of Education doctoral graduate and former Assistant Superintendent at San Francisco Unified School District — the program explicitly aligns MCW's Majestic Healing Pathways™ model with CASEL social-emotional learning competencies and learning-readiness outcomes.

What Healing to Learn Offers:

  • Weekly, 60-minute trauma-informed wellness sessions across 3–4 community partner sites

  • A structured 36-week curriculum integrating movement, breathwork, mindfulness, peer connection, and SEL skill-building

  • Culturally aligned instructors who reflect the identities and lived experiences of the students they serve

  • A consistency-based model — sustained weekly programming throughout the school year, building the repeated practice necessary for lasting nervous-system regulation and behavioral change

BIPOC Girls & Young Women's Wellness

What the Program Offers:

  • Gentle, trauma-informed yoga and movement adapted for all bodies and abilities

  • Breathwork and mindfulness tools for managing anxiety and building resilience

  • Community conversation and peer connection — spaces to share, be heard, and belong

  • Creative expression through journaling and reflection

  • A culture of mutual support, collective care, and community healing

Open to: Black and BIPOC girls and young women ages 14–25

Delivered in partnership with: YWCA · Cambridge Community Center

BIPOC Girls & Young Women's Wellness is a space created for Black and BIPOC girls and young women to slow down, connect, and be supported in community.

So many young women are navigating stress, pressure, anxiety, identity, social media, family responsibilities, and systems that don't always make them feel seen, safe, or valued. This program creates space for them to care for their mental and emotional well-being while building confidence, connection, self-awareness, and resilience.

Through yoga, mindfulness, conversation, creativity, and community care, participants are encouraged to show up fully as themselves in spaces that feel affirming, supportive, and culturally grounded.

We want young women to walk away feeling empowered, connected, emotionally supported, and reminded that they are worthy of care, rest, healing, and belonging.

Our Approach

All youth programming is grounded in MCW's Majestic Healing Pathways™ model — a trauma-informed, culturally responsive framework integrating:

  • Grounding & Nervous-System Regulation — Addressing chronic stress at the somatic level

  • Gentle, Accessible Movement — Trauma-informed practices adapted for all bodies and abilities

  • Breathwork — Regulation-focused practices supporting anxiety reduction and emotional processing

  • Rest & Integration — Creating space for the nervous system to consolidate and recover

  • Peer Connection — Building relational safety and reducing isolation

  • Choice & Agency — Centering participant autonomy in every session

Classes are led by Black and BIPOC instructors who reflect the communities they serve — creating the trust, safety, and cultural resonance that makes youth engagement possible and sustained.

Grounded in Evidence

Research consistently demonstrates that trauma-informed yoga and mindfulness practice reduces symptoms of anxiety, depression, and stress in adolescent populations — while improving emotional regulation, attention, and social connection. Cultural responsiveness amplifies these outcomes: young people engage more deeply and benefit more when care reflects their identity and is delivered by people who understand their lived experience.

MCW's youth programming is further informed by our active research collaboration with Drs. Sharon Dekel and Maren Nyer of Massachusetts General Hospital — whose work on trauma-informed somatic interventions grounds MCW's program design and outcome measurement across all populations.

Our Youth Program Partners

MCW delivers youth programming through trusted community organizations that already serve the young people we reach:

MBK Cambridge (My Brother's Keeper Cambridge) A City of Cambridge initiative focused on expanding opportunity and educational equity for young men and boys of color. MBK Cambridge supports youth recruitment, site coordination, and community engagement — and connects MCW to the City of Cambridge's broader commitment to youth of color.

YWCA A national organization with a longstanding Cambridge presence committed to women, girls, and equity. The YWCA provides programming space and youth engagement support — ensuring MCW's wellness programming reaches young women of color in a space they already trust.

Cambridge Community Center A trusted neighborhood institution providing accessible programming for Cambridge youth and families. The Cambridge Community Center provides consistent programming space, participant referrals, and community infrastructure.

Our Commitment to Youth

"We want every young person who walks through our doors to leave feeling seen, supported, connected, and reminded that their well-being matters."

— Lindsay Gibson, MS, Founder & Director

Youth Wellness & Mental Health programming is free, culturally responsive, and community-rooted. We meet young people where they are — in the spaces they already trust, led by instructors who reflect their identities and lived experiences.

Partner With Us

Is your school, after-school program, or community organization interested in bringing MCW's youth wellness programming to your community?

We are actively seeking school and community partners across Greater Boston to expand Healing to Learn and BIPOC Girls & Young Women's Wellness to more young people.

Contact us to learn more: Lindsay@majesticcommunitywellness.org