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Meet Amanda Kasmira Cryer

Today we’d like to introduce you to Amanda Kasmira Cryer.
Hi Amanda, it’s an honor to have you on the platform. Thanks for taking the time to share your story with us – to start maybe you can share some of your backstory with our readers?
As a filmmaker, I moved from LA, to New Orleans and then to Atlanta because the South combines a vibrant cosmopolitan vibe with a uniquely melodic Southern rhythm. That makes for good stories. As a social impact influencer and entrepreneur, I was also drawn to Atlanta’s abiding sense of possibility. For me, Atlanta felt like fertile ground for people committed to a future of diversity, unity, and peace.

In the 20 years of working my way up through the ranks in the film industry, I became increasingly alarmed by how media uses its power to fan the flames of polarization, division and unrest. I am now fully dedicated to uniting humanity and co-creating an eco-centric world. That’s why I co-founded Big Change Makers with Mel Wymore, a seasoned systems engineer and social impact entrepreneur.

The mission of Big Change Makers (a Georgia-based company) is to empower individuals and organizations to elevate their impact and produce transformative results at scale. Making a real difference means not only committing ourselves to positive change but shifting the systems that perpetuate discord and harm. So many of us have common goals but no common approach. Big Change Makers is a social impact platform that brings everyone together. We offer online educational programs filled with new perspectives, tools, and processes that enable anyone in any context to produce measurable and lasting results for their communities, cities, countries, and the world.

Today, I’d like to highlight the work of two of our Southern participants: Tara Trantham and Tony Brown (Tone of Truth). Through their participation in one of our Big Change Makers programs, Tara and Tony designed social impact projects that will transform the fields of family violence and mental health.

Tara, an attorney, author, and C-Suite executive is committed to creating a world in which no person suffers from family violence or abuse. Sadly, 10 million women and children in the US are subjected to violence at the hands of their own relatives. Powered by her stand for equity, justice, courage and compassion, Tara is organizing people throughout South Carolina to see “domestic violence” from a systems perspective. “Addressing this problem will require more than “fixing abusers’,” says Tara. “If we build healthy dynamics across the entire family, then we can end this cycle of violence once and for all.” While Tara doesn’t pretend to have all the solutions, she is uniting stakeholders across families, social services, and the legal system to co-create lasting change. Since starting her project, she has already produced a significant result: now recovering perpetrators can schedule essential counseling sessions without having to risk their jobs to attend fixed time slots. “It’s made a huge difference for everyone involved,” she says.

Anthony (Tony) Brown is a planning and logistics specialist and Veteran who feels deep compassion for people who suffer with mental health challenges, especially among those who are incarcerated. Indeed, 44% of all US inmates grapple with a mental health challenge, but few receive sustained treatment. Tony envisions a world free of mental illness and all of its consequences.

Fueled by his stand for empathy, compassion, and love, Tony works tirelessly to destigmatize mental health problems, shift protocols from crisis reaction to early detection and prevention, and make life-long mental health care a cultural norm. As Tony says, “Mental health is at the root of so many hardships we face. If we can create a paradigm that makes mental health a priority, we will experience society at peace.”

Mel and I could not be more proud of the Big Change Makers graduates who are shifting systems in accordance with the universal values they feel deep within. We look forward to sharing about more people and projects in Atlanta and beyond!

Alright, so let’s dig a little deeper into the story – has it been an easy path overall and if not, what were the challenges you’ve had to overcome?

In business and in life, we all want people who will have our backs. Someone who looks out for what’s best for the business – but even more importantly – looks out for what’s best for us as human beings – as a person. Throughout the years, Mel and I have learned there isn’t much of a difference between business and personal dealings, in the work we do. When you care deeply about humanity and the state of the world, you feel that on every level. It’s not something you just leave at the office at the end of the day. You take that deep compassion and empathy with you wherever you go. It’s who you are. It’s who WE are.

At Big Change Makers, we believe that Change is not the result of one or two heroes taking action but of millions of people marshaling millions of projects all over the globe. One of our main tenets is that every human has the power to make a meaningful difference to our common experience of life.

Since starting Big Change Makers, Mel and I seem to have tapped into a deep, collective desire to make the world a better place. People are thirsty to learn how to harness their passion to contribute in lasting ways. It’s been an incredible and awesome surprise to see so many people committed to working for everyone’s good.

Thanks for sharing that. So, maybe next you can tell us a bit more about your work?
Before starting Big Change Makers, Mel and I worked collectively for over 50 years on social impact projects and education. Our program derives from decades of training, experience, and concrete results. Given my background in film and media, I am especially focused on transforming narratives in media and social media. I have shifted thousands of “us/them” conflicts and debates into co-creative conversations. I see transformative dialogue as essential to making Big Change. As a community activist and systems engineer, Mel brings a unique combination of skill and perspective. He is especially adept at discerning root causes and identifying opportunities to leverage positive results.

How can people work with you, collaborate with you or support you?
We offer online educational programs as well as customized workshops, coaching, and consulting for individuals and groups. Anyone can contact us at: Together@bigchangemakers.com

Contact Info:


Image Credits

Amanda Kazzy Cryer (Black and white headshot + seated photo against brick wall) – Linda Carroll LC Photography Mel Wymore (Caucasian male) – Ashley Garrett Photography Tony Brown (Black male) – Self Tara Trantham (Blonde) – Self

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