Episode9-Zeethanomad

ZeeThaNomad: [00:00:00] Life and

Life. You and

TrevFM: Hello Neighbors. Welcome to another episode of Spread Love fm. Good neighbors, good conversations, and good vibes. I'm your host, Trevor F. In this episode, I chat with Mississippi based artist z the nomad on her creative process, the art scene in Mississippi, Mental health and her dark sense of humor. 

ZeeThaNomad: Uh, my uh, my sense of humor is kind of dark.

It's kind of inappropriate at times. I kind of laugh at things that people would be like, Oh my God, that's racist, that's class, or whatever is you wanna put into it. And it's like, Sometimes you just gotta laugh at it. 

TrevFM: Enjoy. Uh, so z how you doing today? I'm good, how are [00:01:00] you? I'm good, I'm good. Thank you so much for joining us here at Spread Love fm.

So let's, uh, let's start from the beginning. Where you 

ZeeThaNomad: from? I am from. I was born in Natches, Mississippi, but I claim Maria Mississippi as my hometown. Cause that's where most of my mother's family is from. Um, the reason why there's a nomad in my stage name is because I moved around a lot as a kid. My mother was a traveling nurse, so wherever the agency sent her, we went.

So I've been in Memphis, I've been in St. Louis. Phoenix, uh, Tampa, Florida, Cleveland, Ohio, , like all over the place. So, but Mississippi is what I call and, 

TrevFM: um, in Mississippi, uh, is that where you kind of connected with the spoken word or the, I don't know if you consider yourself a spoken word artist, Mc, how do you refer to yourself creatively?

ZeeThaNomad: [00:02:00] Um, I consider myself a creative cause I do a lot of things. It's just that poetry and hip hop are like the main things. But I make films, I create graphics, I make my own clothing, um, just doing stuff. I just like to create new things. Um, but yes, I started my spoken word career in, um, at, at all Corn State University.

Uh, I did a, a homecoming talent. and I was reading a poem, I'm talking trash about the school. Cause I'm like terrified of the experience. Like it's all new and all these stuff that I'm seeing. It's like, this is not what a different world told me. . Like I've been bamboozled . And that was the vibe of the poem.

And I got off stage and people were like, Oh my God, that was so good. You should, you know, perform again. And so I just kept doing it and doing it. And it got to the point I took a. To Memphis in like [00:03:00] 2016 just to do a couple of open mics. Cuz I was like, I think I can really do this. Mm. And I saw poet at the time, her name was Poetics son, but now, uh, that's, that's my sister in poetry, Natalie.

Uh, she just goes by son and I saw her perform and I was blown away. I was like, Yeah, , I'm not doing anything. like, wait. So I connected with her and I was like, How do you perform and write the way that you. . And she said to me, she was like, I write exactly what I feel. Mm. And I was like, Oh. and I threw away like 200 poems.

Wow. I started completely over it. Wow. And, and I thank God every day that I met her because I think if, if I wouldn't have taken that advice, my, the poetry that you see would've never came about. Cause I was very filtered. Hmm. And my work, like, I wouldn't cuss, I would talk about political issues. It was mostly about like me, like my.[00:04:00] 

My, you know, trying to come out and come to terms with being a lesbian and all types of things. But it got real, real after that meeting and I appreciate it cuz I don't think I would be the artist that I am if it wasn't for that meeting. But yeah. That's amazing. 

TrevFM: And so was that story about that person you meet who makes you rethink your game and make you Yes.

Man, why am I even doing this? I need to step it up. 

ZeeThaNomad: Yeah. Cuz she was like, she had the whole crowd like eating out the palm of her hands. It was ridiculous. And I was like, I wanna do that . That's what I wanna do. . 

TrevFM: That's amazing. And um, so let's talk about that. Go back a, a, a couple of. Minutes. Uh, when you were saying you were a queer black poet, um, I don't know what terminology you prefer to be, uh, to use.

Um, 

ZeeThaNomad: in, in [00:05:00] the words of Audrey Lord, I consider myself a warrior lesbian poet, . That's, that's what I feel like I am, and it's taken me a while to get there because at first I was very scared and very like,

To a certain extent ashamed because of my upbringing. My grandfather's a deacon. My grandmother is a Bible scholar. Mm. Uh, on my other side, my dad's side of the family, I have, you know, aunties and uncles who work in the church. And so, coming from that background and then coming to the realization that, uh, I'm probably gonna get talked about or rejected or neglected, what's scariest is, I don't know what so, But yeah, it just made me stronger.

Uh, I don't, I don't care anymore about how people feel about me. Uh, and that came through poetry and [00:06:00] music and just connecting with other artists, listening to other artists. And just like Natalie said, writing exactly what I feel. That's amazing. 

TrevFM: And there's usually, originally, and right now I'm in Florida.

Hail from New York. Mm-hmm. . And there are so many people that come to a place like New York because it allows them to be, to express the. Points their, their selves that they could not express at home. Mm-hmm. the fact that you are expressing, expressing yourself in this way and you didn't have to run away.

Not, not to disparage anybody in, uh, that does that, but the fact that you did that, you're doing that in what some people would consider a very conservative, um, definitely has a history. Not being as open as a, a New York City would be is courageous. And so did you ever consider going to [00:07:00] someplace that's more accepting?

ZeeThaNomad: Um, I have. There was a time where I wanted to live in New York. Um, I actually, One of the first schools I applied to, uh, for college was St. John's University. And that was because j Cole went there and I was like, If he can make it, I can make it, you know, So, and I got accepted and my mother was like, No, you are not ready for Jamaica Queens.

Like you will get swallowed. I mean, I even say that in a song that I have. Uh, you know, I moved to Florida and I didn't care if you thought, you know, you didn't like the fact that I like, . Um, because being in states like Tennessee and Mississippi and Alabama, they're very, um, conservative. You're absolutely right, But honestly, the, the injustice and the problems that black people face is everywhere.

It just depends on how much it comes out. Like I [00:08:00] experience more racism. in Ohio than I ever did living in the South. And I was born in Mississippi, like technically until 2013. I was technically a slave according to the state of Mississippi. So it's like I've, I've seen the things, I've heard the stories like my grandparents and cousins and aunties and uncles.

I've, I've, I've sat there and watched them talk about living in Mississippi and Alabama in the fifties, sixties and seventies. Wow. But, The first time I was called an N word was in Akron, Ohio. Oh, wow. And this white man stopped his car in the middle of the road and he saw a bunch of black kids. He's like, Go back where you came from, you inwards.

And I'm just looking like you do realize you're in the north. So that blew me. And everybody else was just like, Okay. And they just . They were just like, Oh, this is normal. And it was crazy like, I went to Kent State for a time, [00:09:00] uh, before Covid. I had to come back to Tampa because of Covid, but I saw so much stuff in Ohio, like I'm seeing Confederate flags.

I'm seeing a trailer when you drive in between Kent and Ravina, Ohio. . There was a white trailer that said, KKK still lives here. Whoa. Black lives don't matter. Black votes don't matter. And this was my first day and I'm like, What? Wow. Wow. Where am I? ? I'm confused. And so it doesn't matter if I go to Seattle or Portland or New York or whatever.

I wanna experience those things because I'm, I'm masculine presenting black. Who does not care how you feel about me and who will say things that will probably get, make you angry, but also will make you think, because I'm always here to start a conversation, I'm going to say things that poke at your brain.

Mm-hmm. . That's the point of me being a poet and a [00:10:00] rapper. I'm not gonna sit here and tell you what you want to hear. I'm gonna tell you what you need to hear. 

TrevFM: So let's talk about your creative process and how. Sustain yourself, and how do you maintain the truth and the, the integrity in your art. Mm-hmm. at the same time sustaining yourself, um, on a daily, weekly, monthly basis.

ZeeThaNomad: The creative process for me has, it has a life of its, To a certain degree. I don't rush things. I don't tell myself I need to write poem a week, or I need to be writing at least two poems a month, or I need to be memorizing six poems before every open mic. And I don't do that. I let life, give me a poem. I can write a poem about anything.

I have sat and just watched cars go by and I take an experience just from [00:11:00] watching those cars go by and write a. that has nothing to do with the car, but there'll be a line about the car in the poem. Mm-hmm. . And it's just my brain is always rambling and always thinking about things to where I shock myself sometimes with the connections that I make with my work and with, uh, life.

I tell my artists friends cuz we're in this journey together of, of becoming artists and making money off of our art. Mm-hmm. , um, don't rush anything. Like if you get writer's block and you feel like you're not being as productive and they'll be like, Z Man, I just ain't got it. Like, like I ain't wrote a song in like three months, or I ain't made a beat in like two weeks.

And I'm like, just sit and just let life happen. , like don't get caught up in, uh, the quantity of your work. Always have [00:12:00] quality over everything. Yeah. And so I would rather write two poems a year and they be a fire, beautiful, amazing piece than to sit here and write 40 to 50 crappy poems that I probably will never read in front of anybody.

So I. and it used to not be like that. Like when I first started, I was writing like crazy. I was writing, writing, I was writing. But then I realized I kept writing about the same thing over and over again, but just in different perspectives. Hmm. Like it was always about my childhood trauma. It was always about a girl that broke my heart.

It was always about somebody that made me mad. My poems were like 18 to 22 Z. My poems were drenched in like anger and regret and sadness, like, Emotions that we associate with negativity. And I was like, What if I wrote a happy poem, , Let me just, And then it got to the point where I was writing poetry, talking [00:13:00] about why poets write sad poems.

Cause I would tell people all the time, like the best poems for me, or my sad ones, or my angry ones, or my ones about my trauma. But it's like, I don't want a trauma dump on people anymore. Mm-hmm. , that's what you go to therapy for. . . So, After coming to terms with that, my poetry and my music got more, um, just euphoric and, and it facilitated a feeling of like, It was like a pry type of thing.

Like I could write about something being scared. I could write about something, being super happy. I could write about getting a D on a test and be like, You know what? I didn't study. I'm a climb responsibility for that , like I was writing things that I never wrote before. So the process is a life of itself.

Like if I feel like writing. Then I feel like writing, if I don't, okay, I have other stuff to [00:14:00] do. So it's, uh, it does its own thing. That's, that's how I feel about the process. 

TrevFM: That's amazing. The, um, it's so easy to get caught up in the things that you think give you fuel often that could be negative, but embrace the positive as well, which is a lot of the reason why I, I.

Wanted this show to be spread love, you know, it's act, it comes from the line, spread love. It's a Brooklyn way, um, because love is something that, you know, could carry you as well. It doesn't have to be a negative experience and you could include the negative in that love if you're trying to heal somebody.

So, um, I appreciate that as well. I wanna talk about the Mississippi, this creative scene in Mississippi. It's something that I'm not familiar with. I've never been to Mississippi. Um, and, and I, I, I always wanna talk to the artists about where they [00:15:00] came from and what is that world like down there.

ZeeThaNomad: Mississippi is, it's a hidden gem basically, because most people have heard of like David Banner and big. and, you know, uh, other hip hop and r and b artists from Mississippi, but Mississippi don't get the credit that it deserves. Um, honestly, if I wouldn't have stayed in Mississippi after graduating, if I would've been like, you know, I'm gonna graduate college, I'm gonna go back home to Florida, get a little teaching job, call a day, I would've never became a rapper.

Mm. In Meridian, they co or in Mississippi the, the big hub is like Jackson. Okay. That's where like all the black art is. So you have people who are from Meridian, you have people from Tupelo, you have people from the coast who come to Jackson to like start stuff off because there's a lot of things there.[00:16:00] 

They're like kind of like they're independent, but they're not like major, major, and then they branch off to like Atlanta or Memphis. Okay. Or New Orleans, because it's like a starting point. Mm. But it's the hidden gym. That's what I consider Mississippi. I was not expecting that. . And like I said, if it wasn't for me staying in Mississippi, I would, you, you wouldn't have seen that freestyle on my page.

I would've strictly just been a poet. I'm still a, you know, an incredible poet, but now I can add something else, to the Rav bar. Um, but yeah, it's, it's a wonderful, wonderful place. Nice. When it wants to be. 

TrevFM: Before we go into your words, I have one, one other question that I'd like to ask. Mm-hmm. your humor, you have a sense of humor that that jumps out.

Um, tell me about that and how do you incorporate that into your work? 

ZeeThaNomad: Um, that came with watching stuff I wasn't supposed to be watching as a kid. [00:17:00] Um, so I'm a huge standup comedy fan, so I would watch original Kings of Comedy, like over and over and over again with my father and my mother. Um, I would watch, I was into like political dry humor, so like I would watch old episodes of like politically incorrect with Bill Mar.

Oh yeah. And my dad was a, um, was a Bill Mar fan, so me and him would. Real time with Bill Mar before he got a little alone. Um, and his monologues would be so funny because the, like what he's saying is the hardcore truth, but he spends it with this like, uh, like this, like a comedic turn. It's like, Dude, you just said some real stuff and you making a joke out of it.

And I love family Guy. I love. Uh, boondocks. Like that's the stuff that I would watch. Like I love to watch stuff that makes me laugh. So I will be [00:18:00] on YouTube and just watch standup comics. Like I could spend hours watching like Chris Rock and, and Wanda Sykes and Bernie Mac. Like those are my, that's my thing.

And that's where the humor comes from. I've thought about going into standup, but it's like I got so much other stuff going on that that might be a little later. . It's just, everything's a joke to me sometimes. Cause it's kind of crazy, the world that we live in. And so you have to make it a joke Yeah. To survive just a little bit.

And I, my, I, my sense of humor is kind of dark, it's kind of inappropriate at times. I kind of laugh at things that people be like, Oh my God, that's racist. That's classes or whatever is you wanna put into it. And it's like, Sometimes you just gotta laugh at it. Like, this stuff been going on for years.

America been Americanized since, since 16, 19. You getting mad over stuff that's just manifesting into a new form. Mm-hmm. just make [00:19:00] a joke out of it. Be like, you know what, let's move on on my day. Like I don't have time. And being funny helps with the trauma to a certain extent. Yeah. Um, of being black in this country.

Like, you have to be able to make a joke out of something. Like you can't just be serious all the. . And so, yeah, and it's just, it's a funny addition cuz I'm not out here like your typical stud, you know, braids and basketball and hooping and stuff. I gotta have some type of attribute to attract people that I wanna date.

And so being funny and having poetry, like that's, that's my thing. And it's still kind of stereotypical to a third degree cuz everybody like, Oh, you on that Love Jones stuff. And it's like, Nah, I'm little bit just, just a little bit. D. 

TrevFM: Yeah, I was listening. Um, just a couple of things that I remember just from your Instagram, you were talking about a PTA meeting where the white people, [00:20:00] showed up and you 

ZeeThaNomad: said, Where were you guys?

Yeah, so there's a video of me being like, Hey Auburn. So Auburn has a tradition called Heyday where people wear name tags and you said, Hey, and it's the one of the oldest traditions on campus. But last year there was an incident. A group of white students, total group of POCs, that they don't belong there.

Mm. That got reported. And so this year they popped up outta nowhere like, Hey, I'm gonna be a . I'm just like, Y'all have never shown up to a BSU meeting, Like ever like, Cause my partner went to Auburn. She went all four years. She was vice president of bsu her junior year. and senior year, and I, I texted her in the meeting.

I was like, Has Heyday Kati ever showed up to a BSU meeting while you were there? She was like, No. What are they doing here? I was like, Exactly. That's all I said to her, . And so I made the video. When I [00:21:00] came home, I was like, It's, it's funny to me that after y'all get accused of racism, y'all just wanna rat pop up.

Just, you know, act like none of that. And I was like, Okay, A, I see you, You know, you're trying , but it's not working. It's not, you know. I love that. It, it's, it's, yeah. So I've had Auburn, Oh my goodness, Auburn. That's all I have to say. Mm-hmm. . 

TrevFM: And then there was that other thing you spoke about, about intersectionality.

Well, a, a white woman, uh, and again, when we're not trashing any 

ZeeThaNomad: races, but if I gotta hear of a white woman try to explain intersectionality, I'm gonna lose my best word. Yeah. . Cause, Cause these, what they have us reading. It's so damaging at times that I have to tell my teachers I'm not showing up the class today.

Mm. Cause I'm also reading like other stuff that's super traumatic and I don't need ignorant white women saying stuff like marriage is to women as integration is to the blacks. Mm. No [00:22:00] lady. It's not. It's not nowhere in here. Here. . This is nowhere. What are you talking about, Alex? What are you talking about?

TrevFM: Um, they say that if you could say, if you could be funny there, there's almost nothing that you can't say and make a point, especially if it's a valid point. And, um, that's what the, the greats like, you know, Chris Rock and David Chappelle, you know, I mean all, all comedians do that. And that's, that is the, Skill of being a comic and, um, I appreciate that.

Um, anyway, we're gonna, um, get into some of your words now. Um, yeah, do you have a couple of pieces to share with 

ZeeThaNomad: us? Yeah, I have two cause I have a show to do at like six. All right. So, um, let's see. Do you remember P.E.M.D.A.S. In school? Please excuse my dear Aunt s. No, no, no, no, no. You never had to. Okay, so there was a thing, Order operations, Parentes, X exponent, [00:23:00] multiplication, division, addition, subtraction.

So this is one of these poems that I was, you know, just doing something random and this came out of it. So this is called P.E.M.D.A.S. Um, I can't seem to understand the equation of white people plus black music equals, But if I put in parentheses appropriation plus segregation square to financial and social, I might have a piece of the puzzle.

See, I was taught P.E.M.D.A.S. My brain remembers moments of pencil tapping with my friends, and we over here making beats with our heads. and then cameo, Eminem double ganging into our section and us being nice. We were like, ok, white boy, we see you. We do know what's going on. You spit in. See, that's what happens when you give them too much data.

Now they even made a whole new equation. White people in parentheses, appropriation plus segregation square to financial and social plus black music equals are [00:24:00] missing a. Multiply in the exclusion of my. Calling it ghetto from my hands. Are you calculating trends? Karine Blacks to an end Chorus, Gucci, Balenciaga.

You always gotta follow the acronym. So when I do the parentheses followed by the exponent, Xing out always comes f. Division in the form of mumble and conscious rappers. You don't even understand the authenticity of my existence, so you stick to what gets you dancing. , Mr. Morale ain't bumping in your G wagon that your daddy paid for, but gee Herbo about to make your speakers blow.

P.E.M.D.A.S, please excuse me, dying after. White people in parentheses, appropriation plus segregation square to financial and social times the exclusion of foundation divided by sub job replacements. Plus black music minus black people equals it doesn't, it doesn't make [00:25:00] sense because it doesn't add up. And that's that piece.

Oh, 

TrevFM: that's, that's fire. Fire. I love that man. , that's on some math. Uh, yeah, that's, that's is that something new that you, you said that you're 

ZeeThaNomad: gonna um, it's a newer poem I wrote it about in like in July of this year. And so, . I was sitting outside doing some work and I kept seeing these white men blasting black music out of their cards, , but they got like, don't tread on me stickers on the back of them and that doesn't add up.

That's like me walking in with a Malcolm X hat bumping Elvis Presley. It does not add up at all. But you know, I was just, and I was watching it and I'm just like, they, they don't. Don't see what I, This ain't adding up. Aha. And then it just turned into a math equation. And the crazy thing is, my God, I hate math.[00:26:00] 

I hated so much, was my worst subject in school. But we're gonna make a poem out of it. 

TrevFM: That was, um, that, that actually is a good illustration of you taking comedy and combining. Merging it with spoken word, with poetry and um, I think it'll resonate both ways. So, um, thank you for sharing that. I 

ZeeThaNomad: appreciate that.

Um, um, so this is called Raise Gently. Here we go. Scrolling on TikTok and Facebook, you see a lot of things, but this by far has to be the craziest of them. My generation swears that they are so innovative and ahead of their time trying to undo the damage done by those before us. By the title of this, you already know where I'm going.

Gentle parenting. All this. Give your child space to grow. Let them figure it out on their own. Please. The child is three. What do they know besides cocoa [00:27:00] melon at nap time? All this, talk to your child, not at them. What does that even mean? It's a child. They don't even have the capacity to think that deeply because I said so.

It worked for me. Seeing that hand raise up or that switch on that tree was enough to get me in line. Mm-hmm. Don't get me started about the timeout. This ain't no basketball game. If you active fool, I'm an actor, fool with you is what my grandmama said. Gentle parenting. The world ain't gentle to me and those that look like me.

So what is gentle parenting gonna do? That's why you got Sarah and little Joey running around telling they mommys and daddies what they ain't going do, falling out in the store. Cause they want the frosted animal cookies instead of the regular. What they need is they buck whoop and they'll be fine. I turned out fine.

In the midst of these lines, if you find yourself clapping or even laughing in agreement to the nostalgia of these words, I want you to think about why are you really fine? Am I really fine? Yeah, I'm not out here hurting people, but my [00:28:00] own self worth was always in question. It was hard for me to communicate my emotions because I never got the chance to process them without somebody saying, Stop all that crime for I give you something to cry about.

Think about all the times you didn't do things, not because they were wrong, but because you were scared of getting your butt whooped. Which led to social ineptness, love of self esteem, afraid to get things wrong, quick to anger, always policing myself so I don't come off as uncivilized, sitting in therapy wondering why I'm so hard on myself.

Why can't I take a compliment without denial? Why did I believe that following the rules and expectations of my parents equated to love? Is this really fine? Are we really okay? I wonder what would happen if we all could have been raised, g. And that sad piece 

TrevFM: that was, uh, that was, uh, that, that's relevant for this time.

Um, every generation always looks at the generation that's behind them and says that they, if only they could, uh, you know, you know the whole story. I walked, [00:29:00] uh, 10 miles in the snow uphill both ways. You know, it's like you say with the gen generation before, is those getting the easier. Kind of, um, upbringing and that that addresses that.

I, I like that piece. Tell me why you wrote that. 

ZeeThaNomad: Um, I wrote that piece because I was scrolling through TikTok and Facebook and a lot of black parents. There were some black parents were talking about gentle parenting and how it's, and they showed like how it works for their kids. And I read the comments and the comments were like, from other black people.

Talking about, Oh, that's not gonna work. Like you just making them soft and da da da da da da da. And I'm just like, Why? Why do you wanna live in trauma all the time? Mm. Why do you wanna embrace brutality all the time? We are, we are still in a mental version of slavery. To sit here and condemn somebody for [00:30:00] finding a better way to raise their child, Mm, that's a problem.

Mm-hmm. and like with me being a teacher and with me being a victim of childhood abuse, I can't stand to see little black girls getting chastised for things that are outta their control. Mm. I can't stand to hear fathers tell their studs, You need to stop all that crying. Man up. He is four years old. Mm.

He is four. Let him cry. Or, I had a conversation with my brother and I told him that I'm buying books for, you know, my nephew, uh, he just had a child and he was like, Well, don't be buying none of them gay books. Mm-hmm. , why, why, what, what, what, what, What do you want my nephew to think of me? Hmm. No. Oh no.

We're breaking that right. Because you don't know what's gonna happen with your nephew, with, with your son. Your son could grow up to be a bisexual black man. What are you gonna do if he comes to you and say that? [00:31:00] Mm-hmm. , Is he going to be able to come to you and say that? And I don't wanna be so hard. on the previous generations because in the words of my mother, you can only love as much as you've been loved.

Mm. And you can only love in a way that you've been loved. So if you were loved in a way that was kind of abusive and kind of traumatic, but you didn't know that at the time, you're just repeating the cycle, then I can't really fault you for that because we didn't have that many resources. We were stuck in a situation that we shouldn't have been stuck in.

and we had to do what we had to do, but we don't have to do that no more. There are other ways of raising kids. There are other ways of talking to kids. There are other ways of just being a parent in general, and we should not be like, Well, my mama did this, and that's fine. Yeah. Is it really fine? Is it really fine?

Yeah, because you out here punching walls every time you get mad and you 20 something years old, is it really fine sir? like, like you out here scratching up his tires because he didn't text you back because you got abandonment issues that you haven't resolved. [00:32:00] That's not fine. Mm-hmm. , like I just, I, I advocate for therapy for all black people should be free in my opinion.

Cause we need it. Yeah, we need it. Cause I. I hate it. I hate seeing kids get mistreated because you haven't resolved your traumas. Wow. And now they gotta deal with that trauma and then it just keeps happening and we get a cycle that never ends. So that's what, in a long, you know, long spiel. That's where that poem came from.

That, that 

TrevFM: is amazing cuz that is activism with your words, activism, getting that message out. Z the nomad. Thank you so much. Really, this is really a fantastic conversation. I can't wait to post it. Um, anything you want to, uh, shout 

ZeeThaNomad: out, promote, um, you can follow me. Z The Z E E T H A N O M A D. Um, I have a mix tape out.

It's the last mix tape of the year called Back at You. Um, it's a nice [00:33:00] little vibe. You wanna, you know, dance or learn something or whatever, you know. I have another, uh, mix tape on there that dropped last year, uh, called Inner Child. Um, very personal, uh, collection of songs and I just hope that it helps somebody work through their stuff.

And, uh, yeah. You can also follow my clothing line page at M Y ts Noma. The website is M Y t nomad.com. You get, I got shirts, I got tote bags, I got hats. All good stuff, but. 

TrevFM: Zita Nomad, thank you so much for joining us here on Spread Love fm. Um, looking forward to hearing more and, um, yeah, following your work.

Thank you. 

ZeeThaNomad: No problem, man. Appreciate the platform. Peace and blessings. All right. 

TrevFM: Thanks for joining us. Please follow us and leave a rating and or a review. I would like to thank our show partners, locals I [00:34:00] know, dot com, helping artists make money, find opportunities, get discovered and develop sustainable business models.

That is locals I know.com. Mike Bikes NYC on Instagram, amplifying the voices of activists since the summer of 2020. Head over to Mike Bikes NYC on Instagram. That's Mike with m i c and The Freedom market.shop. A marketplace led by people of color united in the principles of social and economic justice.

That's the Freedom market.shop until the next show. See you next time.