Category Archives: Uncategorized

GRAND PRIZE Winner of our 2019 KCT INT’L LITERARY AWARDS Contest, “SO, YOU’RE RAISING YOUR GRANDKIDS!” by RWISA Author, Harriet Hodgson.


We honor today the 2019 KCT INT’L LITERARY AWARDS Contest, winner,

Author, Harriet Hodgson.

“SO, YOU’RE RAISING YOUR GRANDKIDS!”

BOOK BLURB

If you are a grandparent raising your grandchildren, help has arrived.

According to the US Census Bureau, more than 10% of all grandparents in the nation are raising their grandkids, and the number is going up. You may be one of the millions of these grandparents and it’s a role you never expected. Willing as you are to assume this role, you have some questions. How will I find the energy for this? Is my grandchild normal? What if I “blow it?” Each day, you look for ways to make life easier.

This book will:

•Help ease your worries and guilt;
•Offer tips for creating a grand family;
•Give methods for improving grandparent-grandchild communication;
•Suggest ideas for how you can connect with your grandchild’s school;
•Provide child development information;
•Recommend approaches to help your grandchild set goals;
•Stress the importance of having fun together;
•Offer ideas of how to foster your grandchild’s hopes and dreams.

So, You’re Raising Your Grandkids blends Harriet Hodgson’s wise and moving grandparenting story with recent research and findings. It shares her 21 years of caregiving experience, including seven years of raising her twin grandkids. Each chapter ends with What Works, proven tips for grandparents raising grandkids.

At the end, you’ll cheer for all the loving grandparents—including you—who are putting grandchildren first.

HARRIET HODGSON BIO

Rochester, Minnesota resident Harriet Hodgson has been a freelance writer for 38 years, is the author of thousands of articles, and 36 books. She has a BS from Wheelock College in Boston, an MA from the University of Minnesota, and additional graduate training.

Hodgson is a member of the Association of Health Care Journalists and the Alliance of Independent Authors (ALLi). She is a contributing writer for the Open to Hope Foundation, The Grief Toolbox, and The Caregiver Space websites. Visit www.thecaregiverspace.org/authors/hhodgson to read her articles.

Hodgson has appeared on more than 185 talk radio shows, including CBS Radio, dozens of television stations, including CNN, and dozens of blog talk radio programs. A popular guest, she has given presentations at public health, Alzheimer’s, bereavement, and caregiving conferences.

Her recent work is based on Hodgson’s 21 years as a family caregiver. She was her mother’s family caregiver for nine years, her twin grandchildren’s guardian and caregiver for seven years, and is in her fifth year as her disabled husband’s caregiver.  Visit Harriet’s RRBC Author Page to find out more about this busy wife, grandmother, caregiver, and author, as well as more information on her many other books listed in the RRBC catalog.

 

      #RRBC #RWISA #RWISARiseUp


      Today is Day 12 of our 2020 RWISA

      “RISE-UP” Blog Tour! 

      Featuring

      Nonnie Jules

      Here is her author’s RWISA PROFILE PAGE – https://ravewriters.wordpress.com/meet-the-authors/author-nonnie-jules/

       

      by Nonnie Jules

      By Friday, I doubted that I would even be part of this event.  I’m sure many of you noticed that I kept moving others ahead of me and ahead of me until I ran out of members to move – as I struggled with finding the time in my schedule to write something.  As of this morning, I had finally decided that I just wasn’t going to be able to participate, as again, I saw no opening in my schedule that would allow it.

      Then, I got a phone call at 7:37 this evening from a friend, sharing that her relative had just attempted suicide due to his personal struggles since the arrival of COVID19.  He had lost his job, had received an eviction notice, and saw no clear path to anything remotely close to “better” while the Coronavirus lingered.  That conversation forced me to sit down at my desk just as soon as I hung up the phone.  What you will find below may not be that great, but it’s what my heart rolled out in the final hour.

      ***

      And So, I Believed

      We are living through what is possibly the most trying time in many of our lives.  We are a world on lock-down, and though there are those of us who are living a bit more comfortably than others during this pandemic, many in the world are suffering.

      Some of us are not concerned with how our mortgages and car notes will get paid.  Some of us aren’t concerned with where our next meal will come from, or, if we’ll have to suffer through another night filled with tears streaming down the faces of our hungry children, along with our own tears of helplessness.

      For those who suffer from mental illness, their situations are creating a new wave of crisis, as many who see no way out, are, out of fear and desperation, turning to suicide.

      My heart breaks for these innocents in this war.

      ***

      It’s quiet.  

      I’m afraid​. ​

      I’ve been locked up inside for so long, I don’t know my nights from my days.

       

      It’s lonely.  

      I’m scared.

      There’s no place to hide, ​and ​no other place to go​, ​because it’s everywhere.

       

      I need to make a run

      ​…​just out to the store

      …but, I’m not even sure

      …it’s safe to open my door.

       

      It’s in the air ​we breathe​

      ​…​on everything that we touch

      I never realized ​until now​

      ​…​I needed people so much​. ​

       

      I’ve no medical insurance

      …so, I mustn’t get sick​. ​

      My stomach is growling​​​ 

      ​…​but, it will soon quit​. ​

       

      I’ll just stay inside for now.

       

      I do need my meds 

      …to kill the voices in my head.

      They’ve never been this loud before.

      A little knock at the door 

      …would really help right now.

       

      It’s ​too ​quiet.

      I’m ​so ​afraid.

      I open my wallet and remember…

      I haven’t even gotten paid.

       

      What will I do?

      ​How will I survive?

      I don’t even know if it’s worth staying alive.

      And, what will I eat?

      What about the heat?

       

      I know that it’s summer

      …and it’s supposed to be hot

      …but​, ​this thing has me terrified

      …all tied up in knots.

      ​So, I strangely shiver as if it is cold.

      While parts of the world move, my life is on hold. ​

       

      Under the covers

      …the only place I feel safe.

      Oh, how I wish

      …to feel the sun on my face.

        

      How will I ​cover​

      …the rent that is due?

      My landlord’s expecting 

      …to be paid at two.

       

      Some understand 

      …but others not

      My luck ran out

      …with the landlord I got.

       

      “I’ve got a family to feed – you’ve only got you.” 

      He does not ​see​ that only me has to eat, too.

       

      I don’t have the rent, dear Lord. 

      What will I do?

      Where will I go?

      I need a sign

      …because I just don’t know.

       

      How long will this crisis last?

      No one knows for sure.

      I’m afraid​ of my thoughts​.

      How much more can I endure?

       

      I just don’t know.

       

      My mind is racing

      …it just won’t stop.

      Please slow it down, Lord

      …these thoughts are just not – to your liking.

       

      I cover my mouth

      A cough escapes.

      ​I d​rift over to the window

      …and pull back the drapes.

      Unlocking the locks

      …one by one

      I can hear the calling ​

      ​…​not a voice​, ​but a gun.

       

      ​No, too noisy, I think.

       

      And what if I miss?  

      I’m already afraid to even consider this.

       

      Now, it’s a voice – louder – more clear  

      Almost a shout – deep in my ear.

      “Come closer to me. 

      Look, I’m down here.” 

       

      Five stories below me

      Cars rush​ing​ by

      ​I hear the voice again​

      “​C’mon, you can fly.”

       

      I look back over my shoulder

      As my landlord knocks

      Then I glance at the wall

      …it’s straight two o’clock.

       

      “Why are you hesitant? There’s only pain here for you.

      There’s nobody to help, so, what will you do?

      The world is on lockdown, but you can be free.

      Do not wait another second; come and join me!

      You see, I am free – down here. 

      And don’t forget, you can fly.”

       

      And so, I believed.

       

      ***

       

      To everyone reading this who might be struggling with thoughts in their head, that under normal circumstances wouldn’t make sense, yet, they seem to make sense in the moment, what you should always remember is that the devil is alive and well, and sometimes looks and sounds just like you and me. {And of course, he wants you to join him…in hell.}

       

      Fight those voices that encourage you to harm yourself and others.

       

      If you were not born a bird or created in the likeness of some type of aircraft, listen to ME – you cannot fly.

       

      Thank you for supporting today’s RWISA author along the RWISA “RISE-UP” Blog Tour!  To follow along with the rest of the tour, please visit the main RWISA “RISE-UP” Blog Tour page on the RWISA site.  For a chance to win a bundle of 15 e-books along with a $5 Amazon gift card, please leave a comment on the main RWISA “RISE-UP” Blog Tour page!  Once you’re there, it would be nice to also leave the author a personal note on their dedicated tour page, as well.  Thank you, and good luck!

       

      #RRBC #RWISARWISARiseUp


      Today is Day 11 of our 2020 RWISA

      “RISE-UP” Blog Tour!

      Featuring

      Peggy Hattendorf

      Peggy Hattendorf

      Here is her author’s RWISA PROFILE PAGE – https://ravewriters.wordpress.com/meet-the-authors/author-peggy-hattendorf/

      by Peggy Hattendorf

      “Mother is the most beautiful word on the lips of mankind.” Kahlil Gibran

      We define, mother or mom, as the female parent, whose responsibilities center around the physical and emotional care of a child, who may or may not be her own biological offspring. In certain circumstances, childcare commitments may be handled by the grandmother, stepmother, foster mother, godmother, or mother-in-law.  All categories of “mothers” who have a hand in nurturing, teaching, and fostering the development of a child, deserve respect and admiration.

      The American terms, mother, or mom, adopted from the British English names, mummy or mum, sound remarkably similar or are spelled the same, in many languages around the world.

      Whether we say,

      • Mother or Mom – American English
      • Mummy or Mum – British English
      • Mother or Mom – Canadian English or Maman – French-speaking province of Quebec
      • Madre – Spanish
      • La Mere – French
      • Moeder – Afrikaans
      • Ma – Hindi (India)
      • Moeder – Dutch
      • Madre or Mamma – Italian
      • Mama – Romanian
      • Matka – Polish
      • Mor or Mamma – Norwegian
      • Mum – Australian English
      • Mum – New Zealand English
      • Mueter – Swiss German
      • Mamma – Swedish
      • Mutter – German
      • Me – Vietnamese

      the meaning and the identity of the person referenced is the same – the female parent of a child.

      The initial love and affection, devotion, and care, given by our mothers, cultivated our early introduction to life and the universe around us. It provided the initial foundation and perceptions of the world as a happy, gentle, and kind place or a world to be viewed as hostile, brutal, and unkind.

      Without the support, training, guidance, and discipline set by our mothers, we would not have grown into social beings, in the image of God. Mothers help prepare us with knowledge, skills, and abilities to mature and become independent. In so doing, our mothers sacrificed many of their desires and needs for our necessities and demands.

      If the virtuous governing principles of life are learned by teaching and examples bestowed by our mothers, then a “world without mothers” would be:

      • A world with significantly less women
      • A world devoid of selflessness and unconditional love
      • A world less disciplined and restrained
      • A world less organized and efficient
      • A world less righteous, decent, and understanding
      • A world less emotional, demonstrative, and affectionate
      • A world with less compassion and empathy
      • A world less patient, kind, and gentle
      • A world with less encouragement and motivation
      • A world less balanced and controlled
      • A world less polite and respectful
      • A world less thoughtful, tender, and considerate
      • A world less merciful and forgiving

      Mothers play an indispensable role which is hard to duplicate.  As infants, nearly all of our physical needs are attended by our mothers. That physical care prevailed as we started to crawl and then walk, babble, and then talk, and shed our diapers when toilet trained. Our safety, protection, and physical well-being remained paramount to our mothers even as we matured and entered adulthood.

      For many of us, the emotional care given by our biological mothers originated before we were born. After birth, we were embraced with love and affection. That unconditional love stands as the cornerstone of the mother and child relationship. As our mothers motivated and inspired, encouraged, and supported, they provided the strength necessary for us to grow and mature. As our first instructors, they taught us about love, and hope, faith and spirituality, acceptance and tolerance, courage, and bravery, confidence, and determination, giving, and charity.

      And they raised us to let us go and assume independence; all-the-while, we remain in our mothers’ hearts and souls forever. Mothers change the world with every child they raise.

      Women are not handed an “instruction kit” as they assume the role of motherhood. No guidebooks, training manuals, or college courses prepare them for the most challenging, yet most fulfilling experience of their lives.

      It is hard to envision a world without our best supporter, best listener, and best friend forever. Mothers are the ones who are always happy to hear from us, no matter what we are calling about, or when we are calling. They are the ones that will drive us crazy – but we know will always be there.  And no matter our age, we always need our mothers.  My mother has been gone for twenty-one years, but there is not a day, I do not wish I could pick up the telephone and speak with her.

      Below, my grandchildren and daughter have shared their perspectives on what life would be like without mothers.

      From my 16-year old granddaughter Anabella:

      “I can’t imagine a world without moms, as my mom is my biggest supporter and sometimes my biggest critic. My mom has always been there to laugh at me when I fall but to also pick me up and wipe my tears. I love my mom; she is always there to help me. She is my best friend. I can come to her with all my problems and she is always there with a witty comment and some friendship knowledge.”

      From my 15-year old granddaughter Skylar:

      “A world without moms would be dark and unforgiving. There would be no one to love you unconditionally, no one to bring you back up when you are sad and feeling down. You would not have your biggest cheerleader and fiercest defender by your side. You would not have that unconditional love that a mother gives to her child. And you wouldn’t have anyone who utterly understands you like your mother.”

      From my 10-year old grandson Erik:

      “What a world without moms? No, that cannot be, because it means everything in the world to me to have a mom. She takes care of me when I am sick.”

      From my daughter Rebecca, the mother of Anabella and Erik:

      “Strong women raise strong girls and you are the strongest woman I know. I can’t imagine the world without you and all the other strong wonderful moms.”

      It would be a decisively different and fragmented world without the love, hugs, and the comforting touches of mothers.

      In a world without moms, we would lose our navigational compass, our emotional barometer, and our positioning in the world order. We would be set adrift in an ocean of ever-changing conditions and unknown dangers. Thankfully, we have mothers and live on a planet fondly called “Mother Nature” or “Mother Earth” from the Greco-Roman personification of nature that focuses on the life-giving and nurturing aspects of nature by embodying it, in the form of a mother.

       

      Thank you for supporting today’s RWISA author along the RWISA “RISE-UP” Blog Tour!  To follow along with the rest of the tour, please visit the main RWISA “RISE-UP” Blog Tour page on the RWISA site.  For a chance to win a bundle of 15 e-books along with a $5 Amazon gift card, please leave a comment on the main RWISA “RISE-UP”Blog Tour page!  Once you’re there, it would be nice to also leave the author a personal note on their dedicated tour page, as well.  Thank you, and good luck!

       

      #RRBC #RWISA #RWISARiseUp


      2020 RWISA “RISE-UP” Blog Tour! 

      Featuring

      Maura Beth Brennan

      Maura Beth Brennan

      Here is her author’s RWISA PROFILE PAGE – https://ravewriters.wordpress.com/meet-rwisa-author-maura-beth-brennan-maurabeth2014-rrbc/

      MEMORIES OF MOM

      by Maura Beth Brennan

      I miss my Mom’s quirks. Her superstitions, for instance.

      “Don’t you dare put your shoes on that table,” she would say. She wasn’t talking about putting shoe-clad feet on the coffee table. She didn’t want anyone putting a shoebox containing new shoes on a table—any table. Such an action could have dire consequences. That box must be placed on the floor. Period.

      No one in our house would have dared leave a wet umbrella open to dry inside the house. That would have, according to Mom, invited disaster. And if you left the house by the front door, you had better return that way. If not, who knew what tragedy might befall you?

      Now, when I walk my dog through the woods and take a shortcut home, I double around the house to reenter through the same door. I can still hear her voice, warning me. I leave that dripping umbrella on the porch. I place that shoebox on the floor. Because my mother—she’s a deep, tenacious part of me.

      I miss so many things about her—her funny remarks, her kindnesses, her soft voice. I say things to my daughter and think, there is my mother talking. She blurted the funniest things sometimes, and Dad, my brothers, and I sometimes teased her about it. One source of our amusement was her habit of mixing up common clichés. “Sit down, let’s chew the breeze,” my mom would say. Or, “It’s six of one, a dozen of the other.” When we’d laugh, she’d look confused until she realized what she had said. Then, she’d laugh along. She was the inspiration for the mother in two of my short stories, where the mother’s sayings always came out wrong.

      I miss having Mom to lean on. One difficult year, I had to take a leave of absence from work. A new house, a demanding job, a young daughter, night school to earn a degree—it was suddenly all too much for me, and I couldn’t seem to stop crying. One morning, as I sat feeling sorry for myself, I heard a knock at my door. There was Mom, smiling, bearing homemade muffins for us to share. She settled me at the kitchen table. “Now, don’t you cry anymore,” she said. “It will all work out.” She made me a cup of tea and brought it to me. “This is nice,” she said. “Isn’t it? Just us girls.”

      What I would give to have a cup of tea with her now. To let her know how much that meant to me.

      Mom was a shy and quiet woman, but she had courage and a steely spine when it came to her family. Her courage showed when, during World War II, she packed a suitcase and took her baby daughter (me) three-thousand miles across the country, by train and bus, to be with my father while he was stationed on the west coast. She stayed there, making a home for us until the war was over.

      She showed that courage when she won her first battle with cancer. She never told either of my recently married brothers how ill she was, not wanting to worry them. She told them she had “a little procedure.” When her health returned, it was as if it never happened. She never spoke of it.

      But cancer struck again, a different one this time, more deadly.

      And this is the memory that breaks my heart. She was in the hospital after exploratory surgery and a terrible prognosis. I went to visit, pulling my chair close to her bed to hear her quiet voice. Her eyes stretched wide and she grasped my hand in hers.

      “I’m so scared,” she said.

      She died nine months later. That January, the doctors had “given” her three months to live. But she was determined to live until her fortieth wedding anniversary on September 20th.

      The afternoon she died, my father, my brothers, and I were gathered around her bedside. She asked my father, “Bud, is today our anniversary?” She was suffering and my father couldn’t bear to watch it go on. It was September 19th,a day too early.

      He pulled her close and embraced her for the last time. He knew what he had to do.

      “Yes, sweetheart,” he said. “It is.”

       

      Thank you for supporting today’s RWISA author along the RWISA “RISE-UP” Blog Tour!  To follow along with the rest of the tour, please visit the main RWISA “RISE-UP” Blog Tour page on the RWISA site.  For a chance to win a bundle of 15 e-books along with a $5 Amazon gift card, please leave a comment on the main RWISA “RISE-UP” Blog Tour page!  Once you’re there, it would be nice to also leave the author a personal note on their dedicated tour page, as well.  Thank you, and good luck!

       

      NIGERIA NEEDS A LEADER


      The plane arrived in Lagos at 5:30 AM on a rainy Saturday morning. My seat on the plane, though a window seat, was right on top of the plane’s right wing, blocking my view of the town. I considered that a blessing, as in the past when I had good views of the town flying in, the sight was very dismal. And, with the rain being a torrential rain, I feared what the town would look like when we finally landed.

      Suddenly, I began to feel hot, as I noticed smoke filling the mid-section of the plane. Someone on my far left made a stifling noise and fainted. Passengers and crew members rushed over to help. I could not see much from where I was seated, but from the chatter, someone had suffered a heat stroke. After a while, the temperature in the plane started to cool down and everything returned to normal.

      The extra leg-length seat, which I had paid for, turned out not to be what I had paid for. One large metal box and a smaller one blocked the space under the seat in front of me, preventing me from stretching. I complained to the airline after I arrived but received no response.

      I was looking forward to this visit after two years of being away, but the horrible rain should have been a sign of what was in store for me. We landed and were advised to remain seated with our seat belts on until further notice. I wondered whether the pilot was waiting for the rain to abate before moving on to the hangar and letting us out. 

      Thirty minutes after landing, the plane rocked gently as it taxied toward the hangar. The engines turned off, and we all quickly jumped out of our seats. When the overhead luggage compartments popped open, the entire plane became as rowdy as a tourist marketplace in summertime.

      Arriving in Lagos on a Saturday, I knew that my connection to the outside world would be on hold until the following Monday, but I still sent my assistant ahead to see whether or not, by some strange stroke of luck, my phone could be reactivated over the weekend. But I would have no such luck – that business office was closed.

      When I left Lagos two years ago, I had loaded my phone with enough credit to last the period of time I would be away, in hopes that the next time I returned, my phone would still be active. But, NO! Things don’t work that way in Nigeria. My phone had been disconnected and my number reissued to someone else, so, I needed a new number entirely. 

      On Monday, the stressful journey to get me connected to the world began. Once again, I sent my assistant to the office of the phone company, but it seemed the phone company has something against assistants.  My presence was required instead. 

       My first visit to the phone company went well. I cruised the bad Lagos roads, with no traffic to and from the phone company’s office. The technicians reconnected my phone, I paid for the WIFI for my laptop, we tested everything, and everything worked, so I left for home. By the time I arrived back at home, my phone and WIFI were dead.  Using my assistant’s phone, I called the phone company again to complain, and was told to return with my laptop. By the time I had finished the call with them, it was too late to get there in time before they closed, so, I waited until the next day.

      Four days had long past since I landed in Lagos, and still no phone service and no WIFI to operate my computer. I got up early the next morning to make the trek back to the phone company. Just as before, everything worked fine while I was in the phone company’s office, but when I got home, again nothing worked. At that point, I’d had enough!  I lost it! I called the phone company, shouting and threatening a lawsuit for putting me through such misery. If only people were made to suffer consequences for their incompetence, perhaps, things would work better in the world. 

      After ranting and swearing for ten minutes, a gentleman came on the line and calmly asked me to explain the problem. 

      “I can receive calls, but I can’t make calls,” I shouted back at him.

      “Is this your number?” he continued calmly, unfazed by the anger in my voice.

      “Is that a trick question?” I asked in exasperation.

      “I mean, what’s your number?” The calm in his voice grated my nerves.  

      I rummaged through my bag to find the new number I had been assigned. When I could not find it fast enough, I yelled out to my assistant.

      “Charles, could you tell me my new phone number, please?” Charles obliged. Silence ensued and then the calm voice on the line began to speak again.  

      “I’m going to give you another number and I’d like you to try calling me on that number from your phone.” 

      I dialed the number and that time the call connected.

      “And would you try your laptop, as well?”

      “Give me a minute to power it up,” I replied.

      “Ma’am, is your internet working?”

      “I have connected the modem to the laptop, but the internet is still not working.”

      “Are there two green lights on your modem?”

      “No, there’s only one green light and one red light showing.”

      “Remove the modem from your computer, shut it off, wait a few minutes and power it back on, then, connect it to your laptop again.” 

      I followed his instructions and a few minutes later, my WIFI came to life.

      “Thank you, Lord! I’m in now!” I exclaimed. 

      “Good! Is there anything else I can help you with?”

      “Nothing at all and thank you so much,” I replied, this time in a calmer tone that matched his.

      After my trying experience, I started wondering why I had to go through so much stress to get something so simple done. Why couldn’t they have done this by phone in the first place? Why did I have to almost suffer a heart attack before these things were done correctly? Why do people who are in the position to make things easier for others, always seem to take delight in making things harder? 

      For instance, on that rainy day that I landed in Lagos, with all of the broken roads and potholes in the streets that should have been fixed long ago, it took me six hours to get from the airport to my house – a journey that usually took only one hour. Six hours was the same amount of time it had taken me to fly from London to Lagos. 

      There are so many ways in which we can make life easier for others – for those providing and those using services. We could use our phones and computers more productively, instead of everyone getting out on the roads all at the same time. If we let our fingers do the walking more online and we drove our cars less, I feel that things would be so much better in Lagos.  But these situations can only be improved with effective leadership, and right now, that is what Nigeria is missing … a leader! Someone who knows what to do and how to get it done.

      In a town like Lagos where traffic congestion can last for many hours, life would be so much easier if there were as few people as possible on the roads at any given time. Do people really work in Lagos? When it takes hours to get to work, and then hours to get back home, I doubt it. This is the recipe for a dead country, and Nigeria is quickly spiraling down that path. 

      May God help us! 

      China’s Exploits in Africa!


      China cannot be in Africa because they love Africans. They are there only for their own self-interest. While they are openly discriminating against Africans in China, treating them like animals, they are all over Africa wanting us to believe that they want to help Africa. First, it was the Europeans and Americans, now it is the Chinese!

      Yes, America and China have always hatched a plan, to eradicate the blacks of Africa. we learned recently that they paid off the heads of States of these African countries with billions of dollars just for them to be allowed to perform their experiments on the ignorant African population, with promises of healing them from whatever is ailing them. 
      Would you believe that right now the Chinese are in Nigeria,  peddling the Coronavirus vaccines? We all know that no vaccines have yet been found to cure Coronavirus, but the Chinese are telling the Nigerians the opposite.
      Our president, Buhari, is in hiding now, that is if he is not already dead. His chief of Staff Abba Kyari, died a few days ago from the disease, and we believe that both of them caught it. While the Chinese are visiting the villages, accompanied by the military and other armed forces, forcing the villagers to be vaccinated, we don’t really know what they are pumping into those people. 
      I was listening to one of Africa’s most controversial women, Author  Ama Ata Aidoo, as she reminded the world that after over 500 years of Africa’s contact with Europe and America, what have we got to show for it, nothing! Today, the plan is to reduce our population with birth control vaccines and to subject us to a new form of colonialism, techno-colonialism. Why is the world watching and doing nothing about this? Because everyone who is in the position to do something about this is embroiled in it. They are all scrambling for a piece of Africa, So, rather than stop the devastation, especially of the humans taking place in Africa, they exacerbate it.
      The true freedom of the Africans is in the hands of the Africans themselves. And until we know this, and fight for this, we will continue to be subjected to man’s inhumanity to man.

      If It Doesn’t Kill You First … #Coronavirus? #RRBC #RRBC_Community


      RaveReviewsbyNJ's avatarRAVE REVIEWS BOOK CLUB

      Hello, RRBC!

      Please forgive my sharing lately of news that isn’t writing-related, but there are certain things I feel we need to get the word out about regarding this pandemic we’re living through.  Some things are just too important not to share, so when you happen across information that might be beneficial to us all, I hope that you will also share it with the masses.

      I know that we are bombarded daily with news of the Coronavirus – how it’s taking its toll on families, etc.  Today I came across this message from CNN’s Chris Cuomo about how it feels to have this awful virus, and because he is a trusted anchor, in my opinion, I felt his message needed to be shared with you all.

      From losing 13 pounds in 3 days to hallucinating having a conversation with his deceased father, this is an absolutely compelling account of…

      View original post 52 more words

      NIGERIA UNITE!!!


      NIGERIA UNITE!!!

      I am a concerned Nigerian! I am one who look at what is happening in Nigeria today and wondering how this can be happening in this century. How a section of the country is brazenly creating colonies within the country. Colonies, for crying out loud! In other words, these people want to colonize those areas of the country so as to control and impose their will on them.

      This small group of highly powerful clique, powerful because they already control power in Nigeria. Take a look at the political demography of Nigeria today.

      President – North

      Senate President – North

      Speaker House of Reps – North

      Chief of Staff – North

      SGF (Secretary General of the Federation) – North

      INEC Chairman (Independent National Electoral Commission)– North

      Chief Justice of the Federation – North

      President Court of Appeal – North

      FCC Chairman (Federal Character Commission)– North

      President Federal High Court – North

      National Security Adviser – North

      Inspector General of Police – North

      Chief of Army Staff – North

      Chief of Air Staff – North

      Controller, Customs Service – North

      Defense Minister – North

      MD Ports Authority – North

      MD NDIC (Nigeria Deposit Insurance Corporation– North

      Controller Prison Services – North

      Controller of Immigrations – North

      Controller of Fire Service – North

      Richest man in Africa – North

      85% of Petroleum Marketers in Nigeria – North

      80% of Oil Block Owners in Nigeria – North

      90% of Nigeria’s past presidents – North

      This small oligarchy has secretly but consistently positioned themselves to take over Nigeria. Before this take-over, there was a time when this same group agitated for Federal Character, for the equal distribution and representation of every State and tribe at the center of government. Not anymore since they have systematically taken over everything.

      Now, their next move is to colonize the whole country. This move, of course, is fed by the fact that they know the rest of the country is at each other’s throats, scratching out each other’s eyes, screaming in such cacophony of noise they can hardly hear themselves.

      While they are at this, the oligarchy who, by the way, is fueling this discord, and pitching each against the other, is quietly eating the fat bone. Remember, how the quiet dog eats the fattest bone?

      Until the rest of us, cheated, down trodden, and forced to surrender our ancestral homelands, understand that united we stand, separated we fall, this small oligarchy will continue to raid the country and make us look like fools.

      We must unite and speak with one voice or else we are doomed.

      We must unite and call the bluff of the Fulani Oligarchy or they will swallow us.

      We must unite and resist the onslaught of the Fulani Oligarchy or simply become their Serfs.

      No more bickering, no more fighting amongst ourselves, no more back stabbing, no more sell outs, no more separatists! Let us unite and resist our common enemy. And we can do this without firing one single bullet!

      Even if we are to go our separate ways in the end, we can only achieve this when peace reigns.

      FIRST THING FIRST, LET US UNITE AND SPEAK WITH ONE VOICE AGAINST OUR COMMON ENEMY AND BY GOD’S GRACE, THE REST WILL TAKE CARE OF ITSELF.

      NIGERIA UNITE!!!

      Map of Nigeria

       

      How Gutenberg Will Change WordPress


      Nicholas C. Rossis's avatarNicholas C. Rossis

      From your comments, it’s obvious that you most of you hate Gutenberg. Some, however, were on the fence. And a few have actually used it and seemed to enjoy it.

      There are some advantages to Gutenberg. We will have more control over the layout in native WordPress. We currently have a lot of control with builder themes and plugins, but with Gutenberg, we have a high level of control without needing a third-party product. We will need fewer plugins. Some of the features that we normally use plugins for are built into Gutenberg.

      Whatever your feelings about it, we seem to be stuck with it. So, I thought I’d give you a quick description of how it works, with the help of Aspen Grove Studios. Just bookmark this post and come back to it if you wish to give Gutenberg a spin (or WordPress forces it upon us).

      View original post 578 more words

      NEW BOOK RELEASE!!!


      I just released my new book, a collection of short stories, on Amazon.Com. Here is the link: VAGARIES OF LIFE AND: GIRLS’ TALK. You may want to check it out. Please, Read & review! The link again: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07L4YW6GC/ref=rdr_kindle_ext_tmb

      Thank you.
      Lo-Bamijoko

      In a world where everything is in motion, with everyone heading toward a destination, some to perdition and some to salvation, The Vagaries of Life… is a collection of short stories where the characters are on their various journeys. Helen in You Will Die If You Scream, out of nowhere, fin…