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Jonelle and Karen know we all carry a first story. The first thing we were told about a neighborhood. The first image we saw of a person. The first framing of a political movement or a community we had never actually encountered. This episode asks a harder question than most: what if that first story is still quietly running the show? They dig into anchor bias, the way our earliest beliefs become the lens through which we measure everything that follows, often without ever realizing it. They trace how this plays out in the places that matter most: in courtrooms where Black men consistently receive longer sentences, in medical offices where pain goes underestimated, and in the everyday assumptions white women carry about the people and places around them. This is not about being a bad person. It is about being an honest one. Awareness is where the work starts. Action is where it actually goes somewhere. *Calls to Action* Think back to one early belief you hold about a neighborhood, a group, or a person. Where did it come from, and how is it still shaping what you assume today? Look up what the Black Panther Party actually did to support their communities. Notice the gap between what you were taught and what the historical record shows. The next time you move quickly to a judgment, pause. Ask yourself: is this my anchor bias talking, or am I actually responding to what is right in front of me with an open mind? ***We would love to hear from you! Contact us at hello@whitewomenwakeup.com