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Nwa

Raising Whole

Raising Whole is a soul-stirring guide to parenting rooted in the deep wisdom of African traditions, especially the Igbo culture, and laced with the tenderness of personal experience. In a world where children are often taught how to succeed but not how to feel safe, loved, and understood, this book is a clarion call to parents, guardians, and caregivers to return to the heart of raising emotionally grounded, confident, and whole children. Through powerful storytelling, African proverbs, and practical insights, Raising Whole explores the essential roles parents play in nurturing trust, love, emotional intelligence, and character in their children. Drawing richly from the author’s own journey, raised by his grandmother in an African village, the book weaves ancestral wisdom with modern parenting truths to help readers reconnect with what truly matters in raising the next generation. Each chapter offers tools for building deeper parent-child relationships, healing generational gaps, and creating homes where children grow not just academically or materially, but emotionally and spiritually. From the power of presence and affirming words to the beauty of boundaries and shared values, Raising Whole teaches that wholeness begins at home. This book is not a set of rules, it is an embrace. A warm reminder that "nwa bu nwa ora" (a child belongs to everyone), and in raising children with intentional love, we also raise families, communities, and nations. Whether you're a new parent, a teacher, a grandparent, or someone seeking to heal your own inner child, Raising Whole will move you, equip you, and remind you of the sacred call to raise children with heart and soul
james_rita · 8.8K Views

Iron Veve's Kiss

***“Drakon—” “Say it again,” I growled, biting the lobe of her ear. Her real name for me, the one she’d whispered the night we'd spent together in New Orleans—not “Dragon,” but the Creole curse that meant storm-bringer. She gasped, her hips grinding against me. “Asshole—” I groaned, capturing her mouth once more. The kiss was a match to kerosene, igniting a fire that threatened to consume us both. Her hands fisted in my hair, lips parting with a gasp I swallowed whole, a taste of lemongrass and rebellion. She tasted like rage and every bad decision I’d ever craved—and Dios mío (My God), I was drowning in her. *** --- In the swamp-rotted heart of Alabama, Drucilla Drakes survives by two rules: stay silent, stay scarred, and never let Louise—her Bible-thumping, belt-wielding captor—catch her hoping for more. But when a schoolyard ambush leaves her bleeding under a stranger’s leather jacket, invisibility becomes a death sentence. Enter Dragon Morales, New Orleans’ most notorious runaway—a cartel prince turned outlaw mechanic with gasoline-stained knuckles and a bounty on his head. He doesn’t do heroics; he does survival. But when he finds Dru in a ditch, her back lashed raw and eyes blazing hellfire, he sees a mirror of his own damned soul. And he can’t look away. Their bond is a lit fuse. Dragon’s father—Colombia’s cartel kingpin—wants Dru dead. Louise, armed with voodoo rituals and the wrath of Marinette, the loa who feasts on chaos, wants her broken. The only allies? The Lou Nwa, a bayou biker gang trading in bullets and black magic, and Papa Legba, the crossroads spirit who offers Dru a deal: “Her soul or yours.” But the bayou’s traps are relentless: - Dragon’s father hunts his son with a price on his head. - Big Danni, Dru’s estranged uncle and Lou Nwa leader, demands loyalty as his gang fractures. - Marinette’s magic twists allies into puppets, their strings slick with swamp rot. And then there’s Dragon—hands that mend engines and break bones, lips that taste like whiskey and run. He swears he’s too ruined to love her. Dru knows she’s too shattered to let him. But in the swamp’s choking heat, where bullets sing and loas whisper, desire is a grenade neither one can dodge. As they blaze through the Deep South’s underbelly—cursed bayous, cartel blood feuds, and safehouses reeking of betrayal—they’ll face more than bullets. Dark magic seeps into old wounds. Family secrets unravel like nooses. And the line between protector and predator shatters. Dru doesn’t need saving. She needs fire. And Dragon? He’s got a lighter, a death wish, and a heart that won’t quit beating for her. **Warning:** This is not a fairytale. It’s bayou smoke and switchblade kisses, saints and sinners colliding where the road meets the ruin. Contains graphic violence, explosive passion, and a love story that burns hotter than a Molotov in a meth lab. Will they raze the South to ashes? Or become the sacrifice the crossroads demands?
HopeDoll777 · 10.4K Views

Who killed Dinta??

WHO KILLED DINTA?? ™ As a village gossip, I ran to Isioma father's compound to tell her of the news. "Isioma ezigbo oyim, where are you? Have you heard the latest"? Isioma hurriedly came out of her hut looking confused then she said "Amara I get scared whenever you come to my house to share your news cuz they're always bad ones, it's only your twin sister Amaka that carries good news about with her, so tell me this time around what happened"? "Gbam oya lemme land" I said to her. "Madam land now abi you want me to go inside"? Isioma retorted. "Calm down now Isioma nwa, the most beautiful maiden in our village. Well I came to tell you that Dinta your lover is dead! I said those words without removing my gaze from her, she was moved anyway but she had this strange look on her face, then she told me that if that was all I had to say then I should take my leave. "Take my leave kwa"? I asked her confused. "I want to be left alone so as to mourn my love" she said to me. I wasn't sure I waited to any more word from her before I left her compound. On my way home I passed through the village square and afar I could see recognizable figure moving around the same tree where Dinta and Isioma always stayed and had their love discussions. My heart skipped a beat when I saw that the figure was actually Dinta. I rubbed my eyes a thousand and one times to be sure I was seeing clearly and if course I was. I was alone there, and I became scared I couldn't even talk, then I slowly retraced my steps and Fiiiaaam I ran. I ran ran as fast as my legs could carry me, luckily I had long legs atleast I was sure my legs nearly touched my ears while running. I took another route home, upon my arrival Amaka my twin was eating with my mother. "Ah ah sister this one you are running like a ghost is pursuing you ogini zi"? I ignored her question and made way to go inside the hut, then I heard my name from the compound and I turned, there and right in front of our compound stood Dinta with a frowned face. "Chimuo" I screamed and ran into the hut. Few minutes later I ran outside cuz I had just seen Dinta sitting on my bed. "Sister what is it? Why are you screaming and running about the compound like one seeing a ghost"? I heard my Amaka ask me. " Cant you and mama see him"? I asked admist tears. "See who kwanu"? Mama asked confused. "Dinta oo, mama it's Dinta, he has come to revenge on me, I killed Dinta o". " you did what"? Amaka retorted. "Efuo muo, isi n' i mere gini"?( That igbo statement means; I am finished, what did you say you did? ) I could hear mama say, she was already crying on the floor, then Isioma walked majestically into our compound only for us to hear her say "AMARA YOU DIDN'T KILL DINTA, RATHER I DID". ©AMARACHI LETICIA EDWIN Please add up my new account. The old one was hacked. And please don't be a ghost reader, your comments and reactions matters alot to we writers. Don't forget follow up for more stories coming up by hitting the follow button.
Daoist7AEHQJ · 2.1K Views

Who killed Dinta???

WHO KILLED DINTA?? ™ As a village gossip, I ran to Isioma father's compound to tell her of the news. "Isioma ezigbo oyim, where are you? Have you heard the latest"? Isioma hurriedly came out of her hut looking confused then she said "Amara I get scared whenever you come to my house to share your news cuz they're always bad ones, it's only your twin sister Amaka that carries good news about with her, so tell me this time around what happened"? "Gbam oya lemme land" I said to her. "Madam land now abi you want me to go inside"? Isioma retorted. "Calm down now Isioma nwa, the most beautiful maiden in our village. Well I came to tell you that Dinta your lover is dead! I said those words without removing my gaze from her, she was moved anyway but she had this strange look on her face, then she told me that if that was all I had to say then I should take my leave. "Take my leave kwa"? I asked her confused. "I want to be left alone so as to mourn my love" she said to me. I wasn't sure I waited to any more word from her before I left her compound. On my way home I passed through the village square and afar I could see recognizable figure moving around the same tree where Dinta and Isioma always stayed and had their love discussions. My heart skipped a beat when I saw that the figure was actually Dinta. I rubbed my eyes a thousand and one times to be sure I was seeing clearly and if course I was. I was alone there, and I became scared I couldn't even talk, then I slowly retraced my steps and Fiiiaaam I ran. I ran ran as fast as my legs could carry me, luckily I had long legs atleast I was sure my legs nearly touched my ears while running. I took another route home, upon my arrival Amaka my twin was eating with my mother. "Ah ah sister this one you are running like a ghost is pursuing you ogini zi"? I ignored her question and made way to go inside the hut, then I heard my name from the compound and I turned, there and right in front of our compound stood Dinta with a frowned face. "Chimuo" I screamed and ran into the hut. Few minutes later I ran outside cuz I had just seen Dinta sitting on my bed. "Sister what is it? Why are you screaming and running about the compound like one seeing a ghost"? I heard my Amaka ask me. " Cant you and mama see him"? I asked admist tears. "See who kwanu"? Mama asked confused. "Dinta oo, mama it's Dinta, he has come to revenge on me, I killed Dinta o". " you did what"? Amaka retorted. "Efuo muo, isi n' i mere gini"?( That igbo statement means; I am finished, what did you say you did? ) I could hear mama say, she was already crying on the floor, then Isioma walked majestically into our compound only for us to hear her say "AMARA YOU DIDN'T KILL DINTA, RATHER I DID". ©AMARACHI LETICIA EDWIN Please add up my new account. The old one was hacked. And please don't be a ghost reader, your comments and reactions matters alot to we writers. Don't forget follow up for more stories coming up by hitting the follow button.
Daoist7AEHQJ · 1.7K Views
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