Business Tips Archives

By Dr. Maxine Thompson

http://www.maxinethompson.com

http://www.maxinethompsonbooks.com

 

 

“The principle mark of genius is not perfection but originality, the opening of new frontiers.”
–Arthur Koestler

Steve Job’s life has reassured me more and more that having an idea and doing what you love are the best ways to live a life of passion and purpose.

Six years ago, someone called me and asked if I thought we had launched my radio show too soon, because I stepped back and slowed up for a moment (the year I had 3 grandbabies born within 8 months.) No, I told her all major companies roll their products out, (take action), then go back and do corrections.

How many glitches did Microsoft have in all its products when they rolled out Windows 98, XP, then even Vista? The Apple products have had their ups and downs as well.

 To get the lead on your competition, you have to leap and rest assured, that the net will appear.

You can’t wait for perfection. Don’t wait for the perfect time to start a business or take an action step towards an idea. Just like there is never a perfect time to have a baby, given our present economy, there is never a perfect time to make a change that could transform your life.

In the case of the Internet radio shows I’ve done, I think they have helped up the standards of the publishing industry for both self-published and African American writers.

Many things I’ve tried to do failed, but it didn’t mean it was over. For instance, I’ve tried to sell ebooks back in 2000, when they were fairly new. But now I’m going to step out there and try again. This time we have Kindle, and other devices to assist with the sales. I’m seeing a world of difference in sales.

As a literary agent, it took two years for me to get my first book deal, but once they started, I obtained 8 book deals for 4 authors within a two week period. From that time, I’ve seen many relationships form in a serendiptious manner, which have led to business in one form or another.

So now I know there’s a thing as try, and if it doesn’t succeed, try again, until you get it right. They say Edison had numerous tries before he developed the light bulb.

In the end, when you take a chance, you become stronger, whether you succeed or fail. It is in the process that you become a thought leader, one who encourages others to take chances.

Become a thought leader! Push your given industry to the next level.

“I am willing to take risks and do what I need to do NOW.”

What’s your next step?

Dr. Maxine Thompson

http://www.maxinethompsonbooks.com

http://www.maxinethompson.com

L.A. Blues is Maxine Thompson’s masterpiece. Told in first person by main character, “Z” short for Zipporah Saldono, you were witness to life in the mean streets of modern day Los Angeles with its overwhelming serving of gangs and drugs and, of course, a corrupt police department. You couldn’t help but root for “Z” with the opening scene, a young lady trying to move past her generational curse by bettering herself but is almost raped in an environment that had claimed her family, although she’s rescued by a passerby who becomes a pivotal person in her life years later.

As an abandoned and orphaned child, she wants to do better…she wants to make something of her life and reunite with her younger siblings–with her father having been killed for protecting her, her mother in prison for supposedly killing the man who killed Z’s father, and her brother, a notorius drug dealer in prison. But the life of a cop may not be the best coping mechanism as Z is reminded on too many occasions of what her life was like growing up as she hauls in drug dealers, gang bangers, and the other elements of the streets. And then she finds herself a target, the reason not immediately apparent but is somehow connected with the slaying of her partner.

There are so many elements to Z that most people can identify with. I was drawn to her resolve to fight when she was thrown off the force and had taken to the bottle to relieve the stress. Having her foster mother in her life was was a healing force and through all of her struggles it appears Z found what looks like real love.

This is a gripping tale that is so vivid it almost feels as if you’re living it. I was there every moment with Z, trying to protect her from the rapists, shielding her from the volley of bullets that ended her partner’s life, pulling her up from her drunken stupor to breathe life into her again…admonishing her not to give up and let Romero have a chance, to embrace her mother…especially when she learns the truth of her imprisonment, and being the best friend she could to Chica and Haviland. EXCELLENT READ!!’

Book Reviewer: Suzetta Perkins, Bestselling Author, Look for Upcoming Release, Betrayed. It’s a pageturner and a tearjerker.

http://www.suzettaperkins.com

Hello fellow readers and writers,
 
Thank you for your continued support of Black Butterfly Press, and the writers at Maxine Thompson’s Literary Agency.
 
 Dr. Maxine Thompson
 
BLACK BUTTERFLY PRESS NEWSLETTER 7-22-11
 
Dear readers and writers,
 
Join Dr. Maxine Thompson and National Bestselling Author, Roslyn Wyche-Hamilton on 8-4-11
 
 
Have you ever had the desire to write a book but didn’t know where to start? You know you have a story to share, but you don’t know what to do to get your book published? Maybe you already wrote your book and need information on self publishing, marketing, editing or copyrighting.

So many people will write a book without proper editing. The book often has poor structure, no plot or the pacing is off. Some books do not have dialogue (when it is needed), low word count, poor title choices, etc… (Believe me the list can go on.)

Well, if you fall into any of these categories, this workshop will serve as an excellent tool to help you with your literary work. Literary agent Dr. Maxine Thompson from Los Angeles CA, is also a National Best Selling Author, Editor and hosts her own international radio show “Artist First”.

In addition, she has worked with literary greats Carl Weber (New York Times Best Selling Author), Rosalyn McMillan, Vickie Stringer, Sheila Goss, Michelle McGriff and myself (Roslyn Hamilton) to name a few.

Please join us as we share industry secrets in which we will provide you with information on structuring, dialogue, prologues, epilogues and so forth. <p>
You will need to be present in front of your computer for this exciting webinar. You will receive a link for the webinar after you register.

So please get your notepad & pen because tonight we are literally yours~

http://authorsworkshop2011.eventbrite.com

9780982740323_CVR

Blog: How to Use Book Unveilings to Launch your Book.

 Yesterday, I witnessed with my own eyes the power of having a good network of friends. The author, Van T. Womack, is a very personable massage therapist.  His debut book, The Miraculous Power of Massage: The Handbook of Self-Repair, had over 50 people in attendance, and several more promised to give other book  parties. Not only did he do massages for those in attendance, he sold almost that many books within 3 hours.

Tips:

  1. Before your book comes out, tell all your friends and enlist their aid.
  2. Write a list of your friends as you build your list.
  3. Ask your friends to give a party and invite their friends.
  4. Have their friends you don’t know give you a book party.
  5. Tell them to spread the word. Nothing sells like word-of-mouth.

Books are available nationwide. Books also available at Amazon, Kindle, and Barnes and Nobles.

Happy Mother’s Day!

Happy Mother’s Day!

My mother, Artie Mae Vann, to whom I dedicated and wrote my first novel, The Ebony Tree, died on 12-1-1993. At the time, I felt like my heart had been ripped out my chest without anesthesia, and, metaphorically, it had been. For you see, my mother was the heartbeat of our large family of nine.

Now, with over 17 years passage since her death, I have more insight into what losing your mother means. Time has healed the wound, but, I always feel the ache, this loss, on Mother’s Day. I also feel it at any other momentous time, such as Brianna, my oldest granddaughter’s upcoming high school graduation this week.

Nonetheless, I try to celebrate the good things my mother left me. I know she handed down good traditions such as family dinners that I’ve been able to use, but many, I had to start on my own, such as coaching with scholarship writing letters, or book writing.

This reminds me of something else though. My mother actually wrote letters to her relatives and to me throughout her entire life. I’m going to start back using this lost art–letter writing, too, instead of keeping in touch through phone, email and Facebook. (Recently, my daughter, Tamaira, re-read a letter I wrote to her for her 32nd birthday when she was starting Nursing school, as a second degree. Now, as a registered nurse, she asked for another letter for her 35th birthday, which is coming up May 21st.)

But on a deeper level, I’ve garnered another meaning from losing my mother. Since my mother’s death, my world and my life as I knew it, took on a different shape. No longer did I have an unconditional listener, supporter, and loving presence. I’ve had to learn to live in a world where I have had (willing or not) to become the oldest living generation. I’m the symbolic “MaDear” now.

I guess I’ve just had to (wo)man up. When I think back to how protected and safe I felt when my mother was alive, I feel like I was spoiled with love. I realize my mother fulfilled her duty. That’s a mother’s job–to always make you think everything is going to be all right.

To this day, I still miss my mother, but her words and spirit remain with me.

I can still smell the Juicy Fruit gum she kept in one of her 50-year-old dresser drawers, which all her grandchildren would go in search of. They called her “Gum-Gum.” My mother was a baker of homemade cakes. And she could fry chicken like none other. The typical 40’s and 50’s housewife mother/wife, (although she did work for about 25 years outside the home,) my mother knew how to love.

Since then, I have become a grandmother and mother to adult children, and I see motherhood in a different light. It has a different rhythm and shape to it. Each generation is faced with different challenges.

I am one of the baby boomers in a second late-life business so I’m very different than my mother was, and that is all right. Also, I am currently a caregiver of my husband who has dementia and Huntington’s Chorea, so I have to be honest. I’m not the open door, call-anytime-of-the-night-mother, like my mother was. But when I talk, I make it count and mean something.

Being a mother is one of the hardest jobs I’ve ever had. Looking back, I was not perfect. I was often impatient. I felt driven to create this new world for women, as a working mother/social worker. I was sailing in previously un-navigated territory as the first generation female in my family to have a demanding career. But somehow, I made time for religion, bible study, home cooked meals, baseball, basketball, football games, school plays, sports, cheer leading, the library, vacations, etc., etc. and so to that end, I gave a lot of quality time. It paid off. My adult children are all faring well, in spite of the economy.

The lesson I learned from my mother, who, during my childhood, did day work scrubbing floors for white women, was this. Although we live in an uncertain world filled with danger, as mothers, we are the ones who tell our children everything is going to be all right.

So Happy Mother’s day to all mothers, be you birth, adoptive or foster mothers, and grandmothers. Although we aren’t perfect, let’s try to be present and loving. Let’s make our children entrusted in our care feel safe and that everything is going to be all right.

A Close-Up Look At How The Elderly Are Faring

The elderly population is one of the fastest-growing population segments in the United States. How prepared are you for your golden senior years? Your latter years should be your best years. However, for many, it’s the opposite.

I can recall when our parents worked at one job until they retired, having retirement benefits and Social Security benefits. During their golden years, they were able to garden, fish, enjoy their hobbies, and spend time with their grandchildren or even babysit their grandchildren.
What happened? During the last 40 years, America shifted from a manufacturing industry to a service and information-based economy. This resulted in a heavy reliance on foreign imported products, and now, many American corporations (multinational) are outsourcing their work to a number of these countries. Take a look at any American port and you will see for yourself why the economy is struggling.

Sadly to say, jobs for the unskilled/laborers in industries such as automobile and aerospace, as well as others, have disappeared. This left the baby boomers, those born between 1946–1964, in a “canoe without a paddle trying to go upstream” state. They were left with small or no retirement benefits. Those who found work after our major industries shifted out of the U.S.A. saw their salary dropped by 50 percent or more, thus, yielding them a small Social Security benefit at their retirement age.

Social Security benefits for the average African American is between $500 to $1,000 a month, and this will not cover rent and utilities even in low-rent senior citizen housing. Now we are facing the plan to increase the minimum age for receiving Social Security benefits from 62½ years to 65 or 67 years.

Wow! What clever politician came up with this idea? I just don’t know.
When I was growing up, I recall the grandmother and/or grandfather coming to live with their children and grandchildren. Today, it’s the reverse; children have to move in with their parents. For many Blacks, the grandmother has to become caretaker for their grandchildren due to drug addiction or incarceration of their children. This brings into existence a new challenge for the elderly Blacks. Even though they are financially challenged, they cannot take advantage of senior housing because their grandchildren are living with them and children and teens are prohibited from living in senior housing.

As an elder, I am saddened as I witness the hardship and distress of our senior citizens today. I am saddened for their children who want to help their parents but cannot because of corruption and greed on the part of the “Haves” against the “Have Nots.” I hear the cry of the elderly who did everything right, abided by the rules, got their education, and now find themselves in a position of barely surviving.
Many of them are depressed, and because of their depression, isolation, and loneliness, they suffer many health challenges. For many Black elderly, the only outlet they have is the church, and when they can no longer drive or catch a bus, there is no one to come and help them get dressed and take them to church even though their entire life and socialization has been the church. So sad!

It’s time that we all start thinking, planning, and talking about our golden years. If the rapture doesn’t come and your number is not called, you will get to be a senior! So become aware of political changes, new laws that come into effect, the global and nation economy that could impact your future as a senior. Keep up with your political representatives and monitor what they are doing to protect the seniors. Write letters to your politicians regarding elderly concerns, and encourage seniors to vote because they do make a difference. Let your political representatives know that their elderly constituents are many and they want their voices heard. Let’s live life to the fullest, make preparations for becoming an elder, and our golden years will stay golden.

Being a senior citizen should not represent the ending of life but the beginning of a new one. If we plan ahead, we will have good reasons to look forward to our golden years. The scripture is right: “We perish due to lack of knowledge.” Become knowledgeable.

Dr. Rosie Milligan, minister, counselor, talk-show host, author, business consultant, estate planner, and publisher. Latest release, coauthored with her sister Clara Hunter King, ESQ.: “Departing This Life Preparations: What You Need To Know To Get Your Personal And Business Affairs In Order.” Address: 1425 W. Manchester Ave. Ste. B, Los Angeles, Calif. 90047; 323-750-3592; e-mail: Drrosie@aol.com; Web site Drrosie.com.

1. Tell us about your writing team. As a husband and wife, how did you begin writing together?

Actually, we teamed up as writers before we were married. Kathleen read Mike’s first novel and said, “All of your female characters should be murdered in the first chapter. You don’t really think women act like that, do you?” Since he wanted a third date, he let her rewrite them.

2. How does your background(s) as archaeologists inform your writing?

Archaeology is the heart of what we write. The science has been a part of our lives since long before we went to college–for example, Kathleen was on her first archaeological excavation at the age of ten–but certainly our academic backgrounds and our 35 years of archaeological field experience have become the cornerstones of our books. Our stories always begin and end with the archaeological record, and what it tells us about the rise and fall of prehistoric civilizations.

3 & 7. How do you re-create a world that is 600 years old? How much research do you complete for each book?

Writing fiction based upon archaeology and history is a balancing act. We always start with the archaeological record. It establishes the basic facts of what was happening in the 1400s. For example, we know from the burned villages and mutilated bodies, including those of children, that the warfare was brutal. Then we move to the historical record, and ask, what was the culture like at the point of contact with Europeans? By studying the Mourning Wars of the 1600s we get a clearer understanding of the practice of Iroquoian warfare, particularly how captives were taken and treated. Lastly, we study the oral history that has been passed down for centuries. There are literally hundreds of versions of the Peacemaker story.
For us, the hardest part of writing these books was selecting which details of Iroquoian oral history to use. We had to establish a kind of oral history baseline, which means that we looked for commonalities in the stories. Where many versions agreed, like on the subject of where Dekanawida was born, we used that detail. If stories disagreed dramatically, for example on what happened to him at the end of his life, we had real decisions to make. For the most part, we try to write about human beings, not divine beings, and that posed a problem here. Some versions of the Peacemaker story have Dekanawida establishing peace among the Iroquois, then traveling across the ocean to become the person known as Jesus. We chose not to use this element of oral history, not because we disbelieve, but rather because it seemed unlikely that this was part of the Peacemaker story prior to the arrival of missionaries in the 1600s. Making such decisions is, undoubtedly, the greatest challenge of writing prehistorical fiction.

4. Tell us about the Iroquois. What was their language like? What was their culture like?

Northern Iroquoian languages are very beautiful and sophisticated, containing nuances that can’t be duplicated in English. However, the origins of Northern Iroquoians is a hotly debated and very complex topic among archaeologists. Generally, we agree that the period from roughly A.D. 1000-1450 demonstrates fluid and shifting alliances, expanding trade networks, and changing settlement patterns. One thing is for certain: early Iroquoian cultures were remarkably adaptable and diverse.

At around A.D. 1000–the period we wrote about in People of the Masks–most Iroquoian peoples lived in small fishing villages or farming hamlets, primarily along rivers where they had good fertile soils and easy access to water. Toward the end of this period, they began moving away from watercourses and started building their villages atop easily defensible hilltops. Some were palisaded. For example, the Bates site in Chenango county, and the Sackett site near Canandaigua, New York, both of which date to the thirteenth century. The period we’re writing about in People of the Longhouse and The Dawn Country is the Late Iroquoian, which lasted from around A.D. 1350 to European contact. This is a critical period. At around A.D. 1400, the first evidence for individual tribes appears. Differences in pottery styles, burial customs, and types of houses, demonstrate divisions between Iroquoian groups. As well, small villages begin to amalgamate with larger ones, forming cohesive social groups, or, we suspect, nations.

A.D. 1400 is also the time when the Iroquois were building the most impressive longhouses, and many were elaborately fortified. At the Schoff site outside of Onondaga, New York, the people constructed a longhouse 400 feet long, twenty-two feet wide, and nearly as tall. The palisaded settlement may have housed 1,500 to 2,000 people, consisting of many different clans.

As people who’ve read our previous books know, often this type of aggregation is a telltale sign for archaeologists of interpersonal violence. Simply put, people crowd together for defensive purposes. This is also when cannibalism first appears in the Iroquoian archaeological record in the form of cut and cooked human bones.

Why did warfare break out? The fact that the climate had grown cooler and drier certainly contributed to the violence. We know that droughts were more frequent, growing seasons shorter, and food shortages probably more common. As well, larger villages deplete resources at a faster rate. Game populations, nut forests, firewood, and fertile soils would all have played out more quickly, which means they must have had to move their villages more often. Moving may have brought them into conflict with neighbors who needed the food resources just as desperately.
The warfare, we know, was violent.
At the Alhart site in the Oak Orchard Creek drainage in western New York, archaeologists found evidence of burned longhouses and food, and the dismembered remains of seventeen people–most of them male. Historically, it was common practice for women and children to either be killed on site, or taken captive and marched away while the male warriors were tortured and killed. At this site, the fragments of a child’s skull were found in one storage pit, and the skull of a woman in another storage pit. As well, fifteen male skulls were found in a storage pit on top of charred corn, and were probably placed there as severed heads, in-the-flesh. Some of them were burned. Two had suffered blows to the front of the head. We discuss many other such examples in the foreword to The Dawn Country.
As well, artifacts made from human bone are plentiful on Northern Iroquoian sites that date from the late fourteenth through the early sixteenth centuries. For example, two skulls were found at the Parsons site in Toronto. The Parsons site was an elaborately palisaded fifteenth century village. The two skulls, one male and one female, were found in a trash pit inside the inner palisade. Many other human bone artifacts are found in similar “refuse” situations. Human skull pendants or rattles are found across Ontario and New York at the Moatfield, Winking Bull, Uren, Pound, Crawford Lake, Jarret-Lahmer, Draper, Keffer, Lawson, Campbell, Clearview, Parsons, Beeton, Roebuck, Lite, Salem, and Glenbrook sites. Often the skulls, or skull fragments, have cut marks made by stone tools that are suggestive of scalping (as you already know from earlier paragraphs, it was not a French custom brought to the New World and adopted by the tribes. Scalping existed long before Europeans arrived). Such skulls were found at the Draper, Keffer and Lawson sites. Ground and polished fibulas and femurs (leg bones), as well as arm bones (radii) were used for beads, and scraping tools. Pierced mandibles (jaws), and finger and toe bones, were used as pendants. Ulnae (arm bones) became awls or daggers, and were also strung as beads. Why is it important to archaeologists that all of these artifacts were found in trash middens? Because Iroquoian peoples took very good care of their dead relatives. They had lengthy, and beautiful, burial rituals to make certain their loved ones reached the Land of the Dead. Since these human remains were not properly cared for, it suggests the bones may have come from less valuable members of society, like enemy captives.

Let’s take a few moments to discuss the Iroquoian perspective on captives. By the l400’s, as it was in historic times, warfare and raiding for captives was probably the most important method of gaining prestige in Northern Iroquoian societies. When a person died, the spiritual power of the clan was diminished, especially if that person had been a community leader. The places of missing family members literally remained vacant until they could be “replaced,” and their spiritual power–which was embodied in their name–transferred to another person.
Historical records tell us that during the 1600’s, the Iroquois dispatched war parties whose sole intent was to bring home captives to replace family members and restore the spiritual strength of the clans. These were called “mourning wars.” Clan matrons usually organized the war parties and ordered their warriors to bring them captives suitable for adoption to assuage their grief and restock the village. Once the clan had a suitable replacement, the captive underwent the Requickening Ceremony. In this ritual, the dead person’s soul was “raised up” and transferred to the captive, along with his or her name.
This may seem odd to modern readers, but keep the religious context in mind. The Iroquois believed that the souls of those who died violently could not find the Path of Souls in the sky that led to the Land of the Dead. They were excluded from the afterlife and doomed to spend eternity wandering the earth, seeking revenge. However, such souls could find rest if they were transferred—along with their name—to the body of another person. In a very concrete way, the relatives of the dead person were trying to save him.

The souls of men and women killed in battles that were not “raised up” were believed, according to some Seneca traditions, to move into trees. It was these trees with indwelling warrior spirits that the People cut to serve as palisade logs, thereby surrounding the village with Standing Warriors.
Iroquoian oral history speaks of this as a particularly brutal time, and clearly the archaeological record supports their stories.

But the violence was also the catalyst for one of the most important events in the history of the world. It led to the rise of a legendary hero, a Peacemaker, named Dekanawida, who established the Great Law of Peace and founded of the League of the Iroquois–a confederacy of five tribes: the Onondaga, Oneida, Mohawk, Cayuga and Seneca.

Without the League, the United States would not exist today, nor would our unique understanding of democracy. Concepts like one-person one-vote, or referendum and recall, were not European. They were Iroquoian.
And they would prove to be irresistible to the wave of colonists fleeing oppression in Europe.
In 1775, James Adair wrote a book called History of the American Indian, in which he described the Iroquoian system of government, by saying, “Their whole constitution breathes nothing but liberty…there is equality of condition, manners, and privileges…”
Indeed, the system of government espoused by the League was everything that Europeans monarchies were not. The Iroquois refused to put power in the hands of any single person, lest that power be abused. The League sought to maximize individual freedoms, and minimize governmental interference in people’s lives. The League taught that a system of government should preserve individual rights, while striving to insure the public welfare; it should reward initiative, champion tolerance, and establish inalienable human rights. They accepted as fact that men and women were equal and respected the diversity of peoples, their religions, economic and political ideals, their dreams.
On the eve of the American Revolution in 1776, English papers began circulating the following account, which was, incidentally, meant to be insulting: “The darling passion of the American is liberty, and that in its fullest extent; nor is it the original natives only to whom this passion is confined; our colonists sent thither seem to have imbibed the same principles.”
Indeed, they had.
Gifted writers like Thomas Jefferson and Benjamin Franklin would openly fan the flames of that “passion” for liberty, and set in motion a chain reaction that has yet to end. That passion would become a sweeping wildfire that would race around the globe and shape the very heart of what would, centuries later, become known as The Free World.
The Iroquois, quite simply, changed the course of history.

5. How did you come up with idea for book one, People of the Longhouse?

We’ve been studying Iroquoian cultures since 1978, so the idea has been percolating for a long time, but we couldn’t write this quartet of books about the founding of the League of the Iroquois until we’d set the stage first. It’s hard to understand any culture unless you grasp the people’s past. For example, no one could really understand America today if he or she didn’t know about the Revolutionary War, the Declaration of Independence, or the Civil War. That’s why we wrote the North America’s Forgotten Past series, to educate readers about North America’s magnificent prehistory. It’s taken us seventeen books to get to the point that we felt our readers would know enough to appreciate what happened with the Iroquois in the fifteenth century, and the impact they had on the future.

6. In Book 2, The Dawn Country, you continue the series. I understand this will be part of a quartet. What can we expect to see in Book 3?
Yes, the People of the Longhouse saga will have four books. The first duology chronicles the childhoods of the leading characters, and the second duology follows them as adults. In the third book, The Broken Land, readers will see Odion, Wrass, Zateri and Baji, as adults fighting for the life of their world. They’ll also see Odion, now Sky Messenger, be married and began the struggle for peace.

8. As a writing team, how do you divide up your books?
Because we have different expertises in archaeology and history, the best qualified person drafts out the bare bones of the plot and characters. Then we end up handing the book back and forth a dozen times, rewriting each other’s writing, adding more details, internal thoughts, and honing the action sequences, until we’re both happy with it. We wouldn’t recommend our technique for other couples, however. Writing is a very personal art, one where you infuse the words with your heart and soul. Allowing another person to tear your story apart and put it back together again requires absolute faith in your partner’s talent.

Thanks, Maxine!

Michael and Kathleen

W. Michael and Kathleen O’Neal Gear
Authors of
The People of the Longhouse, et. al

Maxine Thompson: Thank you for a fine interview. W. Michael and Kathleen O’Neal Gear

BLACK WRITERS ON TOUR 4-16-11

BLACK WRITERS ON TOUR

Saturday, April 16, 2011
9:00 A.M. – 4 P.M.
Congresswoman JMM Community Center
801 E. Carson Street• Carson, CA 90746
Contact: Dr. Rosie Milligan 323-750-3592
http://www.drrosie.com/
http://www.Blackwritersontour.com

PAID SEMINARS:

1. How To Write, Publish, And Sell Your Book—Nuts & Bolts
2. How To Write A Best-selling Novel
3. How To Develop Characters That Leap Off The Page
4. Protecting Your Writing Rights, Trademark And Patent Rights
5. Creative Writing Class For Beginners
6. How To Increase Your Book Exposure & Sales Via Social Media, Facebook, Twitter, My Space, YouTube, Blog, etc.
7. What You Need To Know To Be A Great Guest On Radio, Keep The Phone Ringing, Sell Books, And Get Invited Back.
8. Creative Writing Class For Beginners
9. How To Operate A Successful Home-based Business; Recordkeeping For Tax Compliance.

Package # 1 One (1) Seminar $50
Package # 2 Two (2) Seminars $75
Package # 3 All-day Pass for All Seminars $100

FREE SEMINARS & PRESENTATIONS

Spirituality Versus Religion
Children’s Writing Class
Children’s Writing Class Contest Showcase
A Dialogue About Street Fiction, Hip-Hop, Urban Fiction—Are They Helpful or Are Harmful
Poetry, Open Mic.
Poetry Jam Competition

Please make a donation via PayPal, or you can send your donations to:
Black Writers On Tour, 1425 W. Manchester Avenue, Los Angeles, CA 90047

STATE OF EMERGENCY FOR BLACK-OWNED BUSINESSES

BY DR. ROSIE MILLIGAN

I have witnessed the rapid demise of Black businesses. Black businesses are closing at an alarming rate. In fact, it’s a STATE OF EMERGENCY for Black businesses. Do you see what I see? Is anybody paying attention? Does anybody care? Is there anybody awake in the village?
I am the chairperson of The West Coast Supporters of the Harvest Institute, supporters of Dr. Claud Anderson’s economic empowerment plan. We sponsored “Get on the Bus Tours” in 2009. We took 40–50 people to three Black businesses on different Saturdays; one business was a sit-down restaurant. Our purpose for the tour was to expose the community to these businesses in hope that they would return and would tell others about the businesses and to give those businesses an economic boost. Many of these businesses have since closed their doors. Then, these businesses were reopened by Hispanic business owners. Remember Granny’s Soul Food near 60th and Crenshaw, Cultural Affairs Restaurant & Arts, and The Wafer House on Vermont where the old Kite restaurant used to be?—They are gone and now owned by Hispanics.
Jobs come from business ownership. According to SBA, small businesses accounted for 65% of new jobs created between 1993–2009.
I hope you can see the correlation between business ownership and the unemployment rate of different races. Jobs that left this country are not returning any time soon. Those jobs are gone, and other races are hiring their own—so what is the Black man/woman to do? It does not take a genius to find a solution. Entrepreneurship is the basis for economic empowerment for Blacks. Have you noticed who you do NOT see when you visit the courthouse, city hall, county and state facilities, doctors’ offices, dentists’ offices, and even hospitals? There are very few Black employees.
Starting a business is no longer a luxury—it is a necessity. This truth is what led my sister, attorney Clara Hunter King, and I to coauthor the book, What You Need To Know Before You Start Your Business. It is important to have the right information so that you can make informed decisions for your business. You need to know the different ways to own a business and the pros and cons of each.
The most critical component to the survival of Blacks is for Blacks to make a conscious decision to support Black businesses by any mean necessary. Be willing to pay a little more for products or services in order to support others of your race; go out of your way, if necessary, to tell others about the Black businesses that you know about. It is important for Black businesses to survive! Every time a Black business closes, a family suffers, and employees lose jobs. There was a time when a Black business owner would say, “I am going to close my business and go back to work for corporate America.” Well, this is not an option today. There are no jobs to go back to.
Black business owners must seek Black businesses to patronize. Many of them holler about Blacks not patronizing their businesses, and yet, at the same time, they themselves do not frequent Black businesses when they need products or services. Even when dining out, they choose non-Black restaurants. Black business owners must align themselves with other businesses they can network with on a referral-fee-for-service system.
When a Black family-owned business closes, it impacts several households—and that’s really traumatic. I thank God that I had other business ventures and my R.N. license to fall back on when the books and herbs store started suffering a loss a year ago. Many bookstores have closed their doors. The message that I am sending is that nothing is guaranteed in life. There is no security in any business or service, so the bottom line is: always have a Plan B. To sum it all up, what I am saying is Saving Black Businesses Is Everybody’s Business.
Dr. Rosie Milligan, Internet talk-show host, business consultant, publisher, estate planner, author; most recent books: Blacks Faces Economic Crisis: Solutions Made Simple and What You Need To Know Before You Start Your Business. Contact: 1425 W. Manchester Ave, Ste “B,” Los Angeles, CA.; 323-750-3592; e-mail www.Drrosie@aol.com; Web site www.Drrosie.com.

Should You Pursue Your Passion?

Dr. Maxine Thompson
http://www.maxinethompson.com,
http://www.maxinethompsonbooks.com,
and http://www.maxineshow.com
At twitter at safari61751.
On Facebook as Maxine-Thompson
On Myspace/Maxinethompson

“Ask, and it shall be given you; Seek, and ye shall find; Knock, and it shall be opened unto you.”
Luke 11:9

Have you ever known someone who spent all her time talking about what she was going to do when she retired, then she dropped dead just before, or shortly after retirement?

How did you feel when that happened? Whenever this happens, I always feel that this person wasted her “today” time, living for “tomorrow”, which never came.

Now how about people who followed their dreams and stopped waiting for that elusive retirement brass ring?

I speak from experience because that’s exactly what I did. Nearly fourteen years ago, due to health reasons, I walked off a high-stress job as a social worker (I had been in this field for twenty-three years at this point,) and have not looked back.

As I was facing these health challenges, life took on a new perspective that went something like this: “If I had one day to live, is this what I want to be doing?” In my heart, I would always get a resounding, “NO!”

I don’t know about you, but 9-11 was a wake-up call for me. In the aftermath, I noticed in the media where family members reconciled who hadn’t spoken to each other in years. People changed careers and left intolerable situations that they had been tolerating. Across the board, everyone realized that life was short and that they needed to make the best of it.

Don’t get me wrong. It was not an easy path to follow, but it was the best one—when I look back. That first year I left behind my familiar pattern of getting up, fighting L.A. gridlock traffic, and going to work, I felt lost. I didn’t know how I was going to make it financially.
What I learned on the journey is there is never a perfect time to make your move to pursue your dreams. You should save up, plan, but eventually you have to take the leap of faith.

Since that time, I now own my own Internet radio show at www.maxineshow.com, and have hosted three other Internet radio shows on www.voiceamerica.com, www.artistfirst.com (where I still host) and www.harambeeradio.com.

As the owner of Black Butterfly Press, Maxine Thompson’s Literary Services and Thompson Literary Agency found at www.maxinethompson.com,and www.maxinethompsonbooks.com, I also own a nonprofit, Maxine Thompson’s Literary and Educational Services, in order to give back to my community.

This is the Act III, or my second career in my life. (I hope to work the rest of my life.) All of these endeavors grew out of my passion, not out of my bank account.

Let’s face it. Too many women often are not living their lives to the full. Many report they feel they are living for everyone else in the family. Although we want to have a life of balance, we don’t know how to get it. As women, we’ve been trained to think struggle and sacrifice for others is what we should do.

Well, one way to bring our lives into more balance is through affirmations. What if we could reinvent our lives through thinking positive thoughts?

More than ever, we are in need of sayings to help give us control over the qualities of our days. Just as our ancestors used old sayings to help them survive—in spite of racism, sexism, ageism, and classism—we need to revisit the ‘old ways.’

Whether we are working as secretaries, working at McDonald’s, or running a company, we need peace.

In the creative arenas, for women filmmakers, writers, publishers, and those wanting to become artists of sorts, there is a need to decode and recode symbols for our culture. If we don’t do it ourselves, it won’t get done.

We need to reclaim our bodies, our souls and our sexuality. Affirmations can help us get closer to our goals.

In the main, why do we need affirmations? Because today, women are dying from stress. One woman told me, “I guess I have to die in order to get some rest.” And she died shortly after that. That’s exactly what’s happening. We are dying at younger ages and at an alarming rate.

However, the good news is this. We are living in an exciting time, filled with possibilities, so why not take advantage of these times?
One reason is that we now live in an age of spiritual enlightenment, interdependence, and access to information that only the rich enjoyed at one time. We have the Internet, which levels the playing field for everyone. With the Internet, you can start a business on a shoestring budget. You can meet friends on a global level because of the different communities on line. In fact, you can start your own communities of interest.

Become the artist of your own life. Use affirmations to redesign your life and find your joy. Find ways to create multiple streams of income with technology. We now have money that can be made through twitter, facebook, myspace, linked in and other on-line groups.

For in order to have fun and enjoy life, you have to throw out all the mental “what-I-should do’s” and “must-erbations” and follow your own heart. If you are doing work you love, it will feel like play. Learn to live authentically from your very soul.

Creating a life you love will help determine the quality of your health, your happiness, and sometimes, even your longevity. The benefits from doing what you love and living a passionate life are too many to enumerate. (By the way, my health problems have lessened.)
As an African American female baby boomer, I’d like to break ground for the younger generation behind me. I’d like to disrupt our conventional thinking. Each generation should progress beyond what the generation before them accomplished.

Why not make these the best years of your life, whatever age you are? Never forget that life is tenuous. It can be taken from you without a minute’s notice.

So use affirmations to help heal and to change your life. Start feeling like you’re a co-creator with God, instead of a victim of your circumstances.

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