Signed in as:
filler@godaddy.com
Signed in as:
filler@godaddy.com

La Shaun is a visionary, writer, a passionate advocate, speaker, and founder of Pamoja Holistic Health| dreamznpoetri, an organization centering wellness through holistic healing, art and community empowerment.
With over 25 years of experience in mental health and social services, La Shaun brings a powerful blend of professional expertise and lived experience to every stage. She is a creative visionary, Certified Life Coach, dynamic training facilitator, and social justice champion whose work bridges healing, equity, and systemic change.
As a single adoptive mother and lifelong learner, currently continuing her studies in Sociology, La Shaun’s voice is grounded in empathy, resilience, and purpose. She inspires audiences to reimagine healing as a collective journey, and challenges systems to make space for equity, justice, and true belonging.
Whether she’s leading a workshop, delivering a keynote, or sharing her personal story, La Shaun moves people toward action, with faith, courage, compassion, and vision.

Rooted in faith, courage and compassion, La Shaun has displayed her unique style of leadership by stepping up in the spirit of community in the worst and best of times. She has embraced adversity and used it to express through her voice; concern and solidarity for the marginalized, while offering solutions for the betterment of community. Whether leading a workshop, hosting or participating in a panel, or giving a speech at an event La Shaun has risen to the occasion taking the lead through controversy, hate and bigotry fighting back with love and tenacity.
Aaron is also focusing on working behind the scenes to collaborate with other like-minded organizations and more community based projects, especially surrounding the educational aspect. “To continue to grow as far as you know, doing more community based projects. We have a couple of workshops already put together,” Aaron said.
A meaningful conversation on body autonomy and women's health choices.
As the church bells chimed at 8 p.m., La Shaun Aaron, co-founder of 805 Resistance, said most of the victims in Buffalo were senior citizens. Aaron is a caregiver for her 85-year-old grandmother, and she lamented the loss of wisdom, warmth and love their families were experiencing. “These people are not hashtags,” she said. “They are human beings. “Aaron encouraged those in attendance to thoughtfully consider what they can do to support racial justice and to make sure they aren’t supporting racism. “Say, ‘What can I work on to make myself a better keeper of my brother or sister? How can I do this better?’ It’s really about being introspective and accepting we don’t know everything,” she said. “It is about community. It is about humanity. It is about having compassion, finding the compassion, finding the similarities.”
