• Ep. 16: Listener Question: What Makes Something Islamic?
    Jun 15 2026

    This week, we have a listener question! A lovely listener from Canada asked: What are your thoughts on Black Muslims making Islamic decisions?

    To answer, I take a step back and ask a different question: What makes a decision Islamic in the first place?

    I talk about what scholars call a "lived religion" approach to Islam and turn to Shahab Ahmed's What Is Islam? to think through how Muslims make meaning in conversation with revelation, tradition, and their lived realities. From this perspective, what makes something Islamic is not necessarily the outcome of a decision, but the meaning-making process itself. Why? Because the Islamic tradition has always contained contradictions, competing interpretations, and multiple ways of understanding what it means to live as a Muslim.

    Of course, we also turn to Dr. Kayla Renée Wheeler's concept of "hegemonic Islam" to think about how race and gender shape who and what gets recognized as authentically Islamic, and why Black Muslim practices are often measured against anti-Black and gendered assumptions about the tradition.

    Then, I spend time thinking with the one and only Dr. amina wadud as an example of Black Muslim decision making. Through her Tawhidic paradigm and her willingness to "just say no" to certain verses, dominant interpretations, and norms, wadud offers a powerful egalitarian framework for making meaning within the tradition and imagining more just Muslim futures.

    Chapters

    00:00 Teaser: What Makes Something Islamic?

    00:27 Grounded in Knowing My Why So I Don't Feel Cringe

    09:16 Listener Question: What Are Your Thoughts on Black Muslims Making Islamic Decisions?

    10:11 What Makes Something Islamic?

    19:23 Hegemonic Islam

    24:55 amina wadud & Tawhidic Paradigm

    32:35 — Muslima Theology: What Happens When You Disagree with the Norm?

    38:24 — Why Crave Simplicity When There is the Capacity for Complexity?

    Ahmed, Shahab. What Is Islam? The Importance of Being Islamic. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2015.

    wadud, amina. Qur'an and Woman: Rereading the Sacred Text from a Woman's Perspective. New York: Oxford University Press, 1999.

    wadud, amina. Inside the Gender Jihad: Women's Reform in Islam. Oxford: Oneworld Publications, 2006.

    Hidayatullah, Aysha A. Feminist Edges of the Qur'an. New York: Oxford University Press, 2006.

    Wheeler, Kayla Renée. “All Americanists Are Christian, All Muslims Are Brown, but Some of Us Are Brave: Conclusion.” American Religion 2, no. 1 (2020).

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    42 Min.
  • Ep. 15: Channeling: What Wants To Be Known Through You?
    Jun 8 2026

    I’m talking the talk and walking the walk this week by channeling an episode on channeling. I explore two questions that have become central to how I think about channeling, knowledge, and purpose: What do I desire to know more about? And what desires to be known through me?

    Along the way, I discuss my experience as an academic advisor and helping students identify their intellectual passions, intuition as method, and moments when research reaches back.

    CHAPTERS

    00:00 Teaser: Wanna Channel?

    00:32 Finding Grounding in the Flow

    02:28 What Is Channeling? 2 Questions

    11:37 What Is Your Medium

    15:49 Intuition as Method

    19:46 How to Vonnect with Me

    REFERENCE

    Katherine McKittrick, Dear Science and Other Stories, Duke University Press, 2021.

    Kathleen Stewart, Ordinary Affects, Duke University Press, 2007.

    Episode 1: Where Do You Know From?

    Episode 4: Listener Question: How to Make a Writing Practice (or Any Practice) Spiritual

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    22 Min.
  • Ep.14: What is Self-Determination? Moving According to a Black Sense of Things
    Jun 1 2026

    This week, I’m thinking about self-determination: one of the most important concepts in Black political, intellectual, and spiritual life!

    Starting from a moment of personal reflection on feeling caught in an ebb rather than a flow, I explore what it means to determine the potentiality of your own being according to your own sense of things. Moving between Black intellectual history and my own life, I trace how self-determination has taken different forms across Black thought, from struggles for community control over schools to Black nationalist visions of independent nations.

    Thinking with the histories of Ocean Hill-Brownsville, the Republic of New Afrika, and Black Power era organizing, I reflect on why self-determination has never meant just one thing and why every attempt to live a self-determined life is necessarily messy, unfinished, and full of trial and error.

    CHAPTERS

    00:00 Teaser

    00:27 Grounding in the Ebb and Flow of Life

    04:07 - What is Self-Determination?

    07:01 - Two Different Takes on Self-Determination in 1968: The Republic of New Afrika and Ocean Hill-Brownsville

    19:01 - Self-Determination as a Lived Practice

    30:05 - Self-Determination as Trial and Error

    References:

    Getachew, Adom. Worldmaking after Empire: The Rise and Fall of Self-Determination. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2019.

    Wynter, Sylvia. “Unsettling the Coloniality of Being/Power/Truth/Freedom: Towards the Human, After Man, Its Overrepresentation—An Argument.” CR: The New Centennial Review 3, no. 3 (2003): 257–337.

    For a good read on the religion of Black Power, I would recommend: Corbman, Marjorie. Divine Rage: The Religious and Political Dimensions of Black Power. New York: NYU Press, 2025.

    For more on Ocean Hill-Brownsville, I recommend listening to School Colors, a podcast about race, education, and the struggle for community control in Brooklyn during the Ocean Hill-Brownsville crisis:

    https://www.schoolcolorspodcast.com/brooklyn

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    35 Min.
  • Ep. 13: How to Cope When Your Ancestors Disappoint You?
    May 25 2026

    This week, I’m reflecting on graduation, wanting to be a good ancestor, and a question that has been sitting heavily with me lately: How do you cope when ancestors disappoint us?

    Starting from my own experience walking across the graduation stage and thinking about the intellectual ancestors who made my work possible, I move into a conversation about what happens when the people who shaped us also disappoint us. What do we do when an ancestor says something isolating, harmful, or contradictory to the liberatory futures we hoped to find when we went looking for and thinking with them? How do we sit with disappointment without reducing entire movements to individual lifetimes or demanding ideological perfection from people who were also trying to survive?

    Chapters:

    00:00 Teaser: Ancestral Disappointment

    00:15 Grounding in Graduation & Feeling Different

    05:39 How to Not Be Pissed Off at Your Ancestors

    15:04: Coping with Ancestral Disappointment: Two Frameworks

    References Mentioned:

    Cooper, Anna Julia. A Voice from the South. New York: Oxford University Press, 1988.

    Onaci, Edward. Free the Land: The Republic of New Afrika and the Pursuit of a Black Nation-State. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2020.

    Sorett, Josef. Spirit in the Dark: A Religious History of Racial Aesthetics. New York: Oxford University Press, 2016.

    For my note on the myth of charismatic leaders making and breaking religious movements, see: Richardson, James T. 2021. “The Myth of the Omnipotent Leader: The Social Construction of a Misleading Account of Leadership in New Religious Movements.” Nova Religio 24 (4), 11–25.

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    30 Min.
  • Ep. 12: Who Gets to Decide What Counts as Knowledge?
    May 18 2026

    This week on Grounded with Dr. Iman, I’m thinking about writer’s block, perfectionism, AI, and one of the questions that most transformed my intellectual and spiritual life: What counts as knowledge?

    Starting from my experience revising my first accepted journal article, I reflect on why mistakes in other people’s work have unexpectedly become grounding for me in a moment obsessed with perfection and polished performance. From there, I move into Black feminist epistemologies and alternative modes of knowing, thinking with Patricia Hill Collins, Sylvia Wynter, Zakiyyah Iman Jackson, Kara Keeling, Safiya Bukhari, and Alexis Pauline Gumbs.

    Together, we think about intuition, dreams, lived experience, gut feelings, whisper networks, and “what your mama said” as forms of knowledge that challenge dominant ideas about expertise, legitimacy, and truth.

    Chapters

    00:00 Grounding in Other People’s Mistakes & Processing Feedback

    06:14 What Counts as Knowledge?

    09:55 Who’s Knowledgeable?

    19:50 Alternative Modes of Knowing to Rely On

    29:18 Closing: I’m Graduating

    References Mentioned:

    Bukhari, Safiya. The War Before: The True Life Story of Becoming a Black Panther, Keeping the Faith in Prison, and Fighting for Those Left Behind. New York: Feminist Press, 2010.

    Collins, Patricia Hill. Black Feminist Thought: Knowledge, Consciousness, and the Politics of Empowerment. 2nd ed. New York: Routledge, 2000.

    Gumbs, Alexis Pauline. "Prophecy in the Present Tense: Harriet Tubman, the Combahee Pilgrimage, and Dreams Coming True." Meridians 12, no. 2 (2014): 142-152.

    Jackson, Zakiyyah Iman. Becoming Human: Matter and Meaning in an Antiblack World. New York: New York University Press, 2020.

    Keeling, Kara. The Witch’s Flight: The Cinematic, the Black Femme, and the Image of Common Sense. Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2007.

    Wynter, Sylvia. “Unsettling the Coloniality of Being/Power/Truth/Freedom: Towards the Human, After Man, Its Overrepresentation—An Argument.” CR: The New Centennial Review 3, no. 3 (2003): 257–337.

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    31 Min.
  • Ep. 11: Why Black Women Are Suns: Burnout, Power, and Spiritual Knowledge with Tahirah
    May 11 2026

    This week, I’m joined by cultural critic, researcher, and creator Tahirah (@sincerelytahiry) for a conversation on what counts as knowledge, burnout, and why Black women are often expected to be everything for everyone.

    We talk about Tahirah’s own spiritual and intellectual journey into this work. The conversation is grounded in her recently published, gorgeously written, and deeply vulnerable piece, “A Dying Star,” and explores what using the sun as a metaphor for Black women’s lived experiences reveals about care, labor, and exhaustion.

    Our convo moves between questions at the heart of religious studies, Black feminist thought, and Islamic intellectual traditions: Are feelings a form of knowledge? What does it mean to trust your intuition? And who gets to decide what is considered “real” knowledge?

    Follow the brilliant Tahirah on YouTube, Instagram, TikTok, and Substack @sincerelytahirah and read "A Dying Star" here!

    Chapters

    00:00 Opening & Introducing Tahirah

    00:28 Where Are You Finding Grounding Right Now?

    07:07 From Pre-Law to Purpose (Where it Started)

    16:00 Trusting Your Intuition and Inner Voice?

    26:30 “Identity Politics” or Real Knowledge? Who Gets Dismissed

    39:10 The Inspiration Behind “A Dying Star”

    42:54 Why Are Black Women Expected to Be the Sun for Everyone Else?

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    53 Min.
  • Ep.10: Why Do We Think Spiritual Growth Has to Be Stressful?
    May 4 2026

    Why do we feel spiritually stuck… even when life is going well?

    In this episode, I open up about something I didn’t expect to be encountering post-PhD: feeling spiritually understimulated.

    No books or reading, just a check-in on what happens when stillness can lead to feeling disconnected, unfocused, and even bored sometimes.

    Things I am thinking about…

    1. Why do we associate spiritual growth with struggle and suffering?
    2. How can routines be a means of reconnecting?
    3. Why boredom and stillness might actually be necessary for growth?

    Chapters

    00:00 Grounding Question: Why Do We Think Spiritual Growth Has to Be Stressful?

    00:30 Opening

    01:11 Feeling Spiritually Understimulated

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    20 Min.
  • Ep. 9: Why ‘Start With Yourself’ Is a Myth
    Apr 27 2026

    “Why ‘Start With Yourself’ Is a Myth”

    What if the idea that success and wealth “start with yourself” is actually a myth?

    This week, I'm bringing a religious studies lens to the self-help industry and break down the buzz and backlash around Emma Grede’s Start With Yourself. I use it as a case study to think about how myths work and how the American Dream continues to sell individual success as the solution to structural problems.

    I argue that Grede’s message reflects a gendered and racialized version of success often marketed to Black women and women of color, what I think of as the millennial-coded myth of the pick-me.

    From there, I turn to Black thought and the Black Nationalist Movement, specifically the Republic of New Afrika, to explore alternative visions of success beyond capitalism and self-making. I close by thinking at the intersections of the spiritual and the intellectual as I try to define what success looks like in this new career chapter I am presently in.

    Chapters

    00:00 Opening

    00:40 Grounding in My Own Version of Success

    02:30 How Myth Functions

    06:28 Emma Grede & the Myth of the Pick Me

    15:06 A Vision of Success Beyond Capitalism

    References

    Kees W. Bolle, “Myth: An Overview,” Encyclopedia of Religion (2005)

    Imari Obadele, Foundations of the Black Nation (1975)

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    29 Min.