
By Kenya Miles | Lifestyle & Wellness Contributor, Mood Magazine
It started with a smoothie.
I was tired. Sluggish. Grieving the kind of grief you don’t talk about out loud. The kind that settles into your stomach, your skin, your soul. I hadn’t been eating well. I wasn’t sleeping much. I just knew I didn’t feel like myself.
So I walked into Uptown Veg on 125th with no plan, no expectation—just an ache.
The brother behind the counter smiled like he’d been expecting me all day.
“What you feelin’?”
I shrugged. “Something with ginger, maybe.”
He nodded, grabbed some kale, beet, and apple, and started blending.

As he handed it to me, he said, “You healing today?”
Not a question. A declaration.
That was the first time I believed I could.
The smoothie wasn’t magic, but it sparked something. My body registered the message before my mind could name it: You deserve to feel good.
I sat by the window and sipped slowly. The juice was bright and earthy. A little sweet, a little punchy. It felt alive—and for the first time in weeks, so did I.

I started going back weekly.
Yes, for the juice. But also for the energy. For the nods from strangers who felt like cousins. For the reggae and gospel blending through the speakers. For the chalkboard menu scrawled with ingredients that once seemed foreign—burdock root, sea moss—but now felt like old friends.
There’s something quietly revolutionary about a Black-owned juice bar in the middle of Harlem.
Uptown Veg isn’t slick or trendy. It doesn’t have polished cement floors or $18 salads. What it does have is soul. Intention. An understanding that wellness isn’t a luxury—it’s a right. That our healing doesn’t need to look like anyone else’s. That celery juice and ancestral wisdom can coexist.
The elders come for carrot juice and conversation. The kids swing by after school for smoothies. The tired moms. The gym heads. The stressed-out artists like me. We gather here in our comings and goings because this space sees us.
In a neighborhood that’s constantly being watched, surveilled, and sold—Uptown Veg holds space instead. It offers something radical: nourishment without judgment.
It reminded me that healing isn’t always dramatic. Sometimes it’s a series of small decisions: Add turmeric. Drink water. Breathe. Show up.
My skin cleared. My sleep deepened. But more than that, my mood lifted. I started walking taller. Saying “no” more often. Laughing more. I even pulled out my old recipe journal and started making my own smoothies at home. Not because I wanted to be trendy—but because I finally wanted to take care of myself.
Healing, I’ve learned, is not a straight line. It’s a circle. You return to what fed you. Again and again.
For me, it started at 52 E 125th Street, under a red awning, with kale and ginger and a soft-spoken man who said, “You healing today?”
I guess I still am.
And I’m grateful that a juice bar in Harlem gave me permission to begin.
