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.
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.
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.