Clients who seek refuge at Wellness Paradigm in south Minneapolis are often carrying a specific kind of deeply rooted stress — and they are relieved they need not explain it.
Practitioners at the burgeoning Black-owned business understand the weight-of-the-world strain that leaders in communities of color bear as they work toward racial justice.
The center's owner wants clients to immediately feel relaxed and safe. Scents of essential oils and freshly brewed small-batch Minnesota herbal teas waft through the center, serene art by South Side Black artist Linda Taylor graces the walls and selenite crystals sit beside massage tables.
"In the same way that our children need teachers that look like them, in terms of the alternative health field we need practitioners that look like us as well," said Kinshasha Kambui, a Black bodyworker and healer who opened the center in the Kingfield neighborhood to the public in February. "I realized that I could be that catalyst."
Many local civil rights and community leaders have found trust in her care.
The center features therapeutic massage, colon hydrotherapy and ear candling, among other services. In addition to Kambui, longtime host of the KFAI radio show "Health Notes," there are five in-house practitioners including a psychologist.
"We're facilitators, really. What we do is create the ease and we create the conditions so that the body can heal itself," Kambui said.
The wellness industry in the U.S. has exploded in recent years, with consumers spending more than $450 billion annually on products and services, according to an analysis from the management consulting firm McKinsey & Co. But Black consumers say the industry is not sufficiently meeting their needs, according to the same report.