Experienced Love

Experienced Love

soundcloud.com/user-530116647/tv-talk-with-the-sistas
Take a moment and listen to my new Podcast, TV Talk with the Sistas. In our first episode of this monthly feature we chat about two of our favorite shows, Sanford and Son and Midsomer Murders. Diverse, right? Check it out and see what they have in common.
This months Affirmations encourage you to do

Homage is published in WORDPEACE, an online journal dedicated to promoting peace and hope for all people.
Homage is work that pays tribute to artist Aaron Douglass. He contributed to the Harlem Renaissance. You can see my work in Wordpeace Issue 5-1
Winter Spring Issue 5-1
Three months into 2020 and there has probably been a lot of big picture thinking. For March lets look at the details.

Dancing During The Storm is a collection of short stories that represent people dealing with the storms of life. There are times when we have to decide are we going to lay down or fight. All of these stories tell of people who are either coming out of, in the middle of or going into a storm. In this second volume, the stories deal with justice, women’s issues and deception.
Available on Amazon

I hope you learned something and it encouraged your spirit to see all of the things African Americans accomplished throughout history.

















The new magazine Fill In The Gap Magazine is designed to give a voice to marginalized groups with helpful information and entertainment. It will also give insight into different cultures.
Our Winter Issue is available. You will learn some things you didn’t know.
Winter Issue Fill In The Gap Winter Issue 2019

Click here for access to other issues. Fill In The Gap



George Washington Carver became one of the leading agronomists of his time, pioneering numerous uses for peanuts, soybeans, and sweet potatoes. Born a slave in Missouri in midst of the Civil War, Carver was fascinated by plants from an early age. As the first African-American undergraduate student at Iowa State, he studied soybean fungi and developed new means of crop rotation. After earning his master’s degree, Carver accepted a job at Alabama’s Tuskegee Institute, a leading university of African Americans. It was at Tuskegee that Carver made his greatest contributions to science, developing more than 300 uses for the peanut alone, including soap, skin lotion, and paint. (information from thoughtco.com)