Books That Return You to Yourself

The Beautiful Powerful Love series was written for Black women at a crossroads — navigating healing, identity, and what it means to live a life organized around something other than survival.

These books don't tell you who to become. They help you remember who you've always been.

Cover of Remember Who The F*ck You Are.
Sample Activity Page from Remember Who The F*ck You Are.

Remember Who The F*ck You Are

Activity Book for Black Women

This is not a journal. It is an excavation.

Remember Who The F*ck You Are moves through seven portals of healing — Nurture Yourself, Embody Your Sensuality, Transform Your Life, Be Devoted to Your Growth, Embrace Your Shadow, Activate Your Womb Wisdom, and Seek Balance and Healing with Nature — each one designed to return you to a part of yourself that survival conditioning asked you to set aside.

Inside each portal you'll find a layered mix of reflective and playful activities unlike anything else in the self-help space: guided missions of remembering, Affirmation Labs, F*ck-It Lists, journaling prompts, coloring pages, word games, mazes, weekly planners, and more — all working together to move the healing through your mind, your body, and your spirit simultaneously.

This book was built on one conviction: you don't need to be fixed. You need to remember. And remembering is its own kind of medicine.

Print, ebook, and Audiobook cover Images for From Fat, Black, And Unlovable to Beautiful, Powerful, Love

From Fat, Black, and Unlovable to Beautiful, Powerful, Love

A memoir of survival, ancestral healing, and the long road back to self

In 2017, Barbara Ohuninifa survived an aortic dissection — a cardiac event with a 99% fatality rate — along with three open-heart surgeries and three resuscitations. What the doctors called a medical emergency, Barbara eventually came to understand as the body's final, loudest demand to be heard after a lifetime of carrying too much.

This memoir is the story of what came before, during, and after that moment. It begins in Chicago, moves through Atlanta, through corporate boardrooms and a broken marriage and a life that looked correct from the outside while something essential went unwitnessed inside. It is raw, specific, and unapologetic — the kind of book that does not ask for your comfort before it tells the truth.

What it offers is not a prescription for healing. It is the witness of one woman's return to herself — through ancestral reckoning, somatic truth, and the stubborn, persistent practice of choosing her own life. Barbara wrote this book so that Black women navigating their own crossroads would know: the path back exists. Someone has already walked it. And she left a trail.