NYWIFT Blog

Meet the New NYWIFT Member: Tiána Lynn

Welcome to NYWIFT, Tiána Lynn!

Tiána Lynn is the Founder and CEO of Wholistic Vibes Wellness (WVW), a neuroinclusive consulting and training firm focused on Black mental health, workplace culture, and systems-level change.

With a background in case management, HR, and operations, she specializes in psychological safety frameworks, burnout prevention infrastructure, and trauma-aware leadership development.

Through WVW Academy she is advancing accredited workforce training—particularly for Community Health Workers. Tiána is also the host of the Wholistic Vibes Podcast, where she explores Black mental health, identity, and healing through storytelling.

Her work centers on building sustainable environments where people are supported, valued, and able to thrive.

We spoke to her about her fascinating work at the intersection of media and wellness.

 

Could you give our readers a brief introduction to yourself?

My name is Tiána Lynn, and I’m the Founder and CEO of Wholistic Vibes Wellness (WVW). My work sits at the intersection of Black mental health, workplace culture, and systems-level change. I focus on helping organizations build burnout-resistant, neuroinclusive environments where people are supported, valued, and able to thrive sustainably without burning out.

With a background in case management, HR, and operations—particularly supporting high-need populations—I bring a systems perspective to mental health and workplace culture. My consulting, training, and podcast work all center on making mental health, especially for Black communities, structurally supported rather than an afterthought.

 

 

What brought you to NYWIFT?

I’ve always been drawn to storytelling. As my work in Black mental health and workplace culture has evolved, I’ve become more intentional about how these stories are told—especially stories involving trauma, healing, and systemic change.

Joining New York Women in Film & Television felt like a natural evolution. I wanted to expand my voice from podcasting into visual storytelling, production, and broader media influence to impact culture at scale.

 

When did Black mental health advocacy become the central purpose of your life’s work?

It was a series of experiences rather than a single moment. Through direct client work, I witnessed how individuals carry not only personal burdens but the weight of unsupportive systems—overwork, lack of voice, and expectation to push through burnout. Simultaneously navigating my own mental health journey made it clear: I couldn’t ignore the structural gaps.

Black mental health advocacy shifted from something I cared about to a responsibility I felt called to address through policy, systems redesign, and real accountability.

 

Tell us about Wholistic Vibes Wellness. What is the origin story, and what are your goals with it?

Wholistic Vibes Wellness was born from seeing the persistent gap between what people need and what workplaces and systems actually deliver. In previous roles, I saw talented people expected to give everything while receiving minimal structural support, leading to exhaustion and disengagement.

Today, WVW is a wellness and culture-focused organization grounded in care, clarity, and sustainability. We partner with organizations to build people-centered systems, including psychological safety frameworks, burnout prevention infrastructure, neuroinclusive and trauma-aware practices, leadership development, and intentional culture design.

We are advancing WVW Academy to provide accredited training for workforces—particularly Community Health Workers—who are often on the frontlines but lack adequate structural support. Our goal is clear: move from performative wellness to real, accountable systems that support long-term thriving, retention, and impact.

 

 

Is there one moment or experience from your career that stands out as most meaningful?

One of the most meaningful experiences has been building WVW after leaving environments where I didn’t feel valued. Turning personal and observed challenges into a platform that creates space for others has been powerful. Advancing WVW Academy—developing accredited training programs—stands out as validation that this work is both needed and making a difference.

 

What drew you to podcasting? What do you think makes it an impactful medium?

Podcasting felt natural because it allows for deep, honest conversation in a way many other mediums don’t. It provides space to unpack complex topics like Black mental health, identity, and healing without rushing to highlights. For me, it’s about creating connection and helping listeners feel seen. That ability to sit with the full story is what makes it so impactful.

 

What advice would you give to Black creatives and entrepreneurs who are early in their careers?

Don’t rush to perform success—focus on building something substantive. Longevity comes from depth, not just visibility. Give yourself permission to evolve; your vision will clarify over time. Most importantly, protect your vision. Not everyone will understand it in the early stages, and that’s okay. Keep building.

 

Connect with on LinkedIn follow her on Instagram at @tianalynnxo. The

Wholistic Vibes Podcast is available on Apple, Spotify, and Buzzsprout. Learn more about the WVW Academy at wvwacademy.com.

 

(All images courtesy of Tiána Lynn)

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nywift New York Women in Film & Television supports women calling the shots in film, television and digital media.

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