Skip to main content

SGA helps students find their Zen Zone

SGA President Mona Zahir at the Zen Zone launch.

Winston-Salem State University (WSSU) students will soon have a new place on campus to relax and focus.

This summer, two triple hammocks will be installed in the historic lawn between Carolina and Blair halls, launching a student Zen Zone.

Student Government Association (SGA) launched the Zen Zone on April 28, student reading day. For the launch, yoga mats were brought out onto the lawn, and pooches from the Winston-Salem Dog Training Club were available to pet and walk. SGA leaders also served ice cream.

Student Government Association President Mona Zahir said the idea of a Zen Zone – a green place where students could relax and “be free of cultural norms and judgment” – fits closely with SGA’s motto this year of “Challenging the Existing.”

“SGA thought this backyard of Blair Hall was essentially the getaway to relax and focus more on individual care,” Zahir said. “One student in particular approached me and gave me the biggest hug sharing how much we needed this and that she will literally will be there every day during the summer.”

Zahir, who will graduate from WSSU in May, said the Zen Zone also has strong support from the University of North Carolina Association of Student Governments (UNC ASG) and its #StigmaFree campaign, which focuses on student mental health. Starting this summer, in addition to hammocks, students will be able to use their RAMCard at Student Affairs to check out yoga mats and picnic blankets they can use in the Zen Zone.

“I trust the future SGAs to keep this as an ongoing initiative because the launch was just the foundation.”

SGA worked closely with WSSU’s Facilities Department to secure funding for the hammocks and the sand beds for the Zen Zone launch.

WSS Zen Zone
Pups from the Winston-Salem Dog Training Club were on hand for the launch of the Zen Zone.

More News

WSSU nursing alumnus earns Lifetime Achievement Award at age 37

Winston-Salem State University nursing alumnus Dr. Clifton Kenon Jr. is no stranger to being a trailblazer. At age 33, he won the highest honor given to a nurse from the American Academy of Nursing. Now, at age 37, he is making history again by becoming the first male and first millennial to receive the Lifetime Achievement Award from AWHONN.

Read Moreabout WSSU nursing alumnus earns Lifetime Achievement Award at age 37

NC Treasurer Folwell returns missing funds to WSSU where he got his college start

For Winston-Salem State University, Friday, Dec. 13, was Commencement Day. For State Treasurer Dale R. Folwell, CPA, it was a homecoming of sorts. For University Chancellor Bonita Brown, it was Christmas come early.

Read Moreabout NC Treasurer Folwell returns missing funds to WSSU where he got his college start

WSSU chancellor presides over historic commencement ceremony

Winston-Salem State University celebrated its fall graduates during commencement Friday, Dec. 13. More than 500 students became alumni, ready to depart to serve, during the historic ceremony that was presided by the university’s first female chief administrator, Chancellor Bonita Brown.

Read Moreabout WSSU chancellor presides over historic commencement ceremony