Friday, November 16, 2007

Things Liberian Women do that are right!!

Things Liberian Women do that are right!!

Now that we know about our negatives, let talk about our positives:
1। A Liberian woman will make sure there is a cooked meal in her home each and every day of the week.

2. A Liberian woman will keep her home clean at all times, not only when guests are coming.
3. A Liberian woman will looked her best no matter what her income level is.
4. A Liberian woman will quickly adjust to any surroundings.
5. A Liberian woman will love hard, give her man her all and sometimes never get anything in return and still love all over again.
6. A Liberian woman will work two to three jobs to make sure her kids are getting the best education possible even if she is not educated.
7. A Liberian woman will find a way to make a decent living no matter where on earth she lives, even if it means selling peanuts on the streets or frying fish in the hot sun to feed her family.
8. Liberian women are born with a business mindset and are very discipline people.
9. A Liberian woman is a God fearing Christian being and hardly ever will she be seen in church with pants on.
10. A Liberian woman will put her life on hold for her husband to get his on track.
11. Liberian women are multi-talented, most have at least three things they are very good at like, marketing, sewing, cooking, braiding, child care to name a few.
12. A Liberian woman will tolerate/overlook more abuses then any other women in the world why, because we were not taught to love ourselves, we were taught to love our men and care for our kids.
13. A Liberian woman is very good at sharing.
14. A Liberian woman will meet another Liberian woman on the street and greet her as if she has known her for years.
15. A Liberian woman will not get involve in business or politics to gain power but to actual do the job.
16. A Liberian woman can take her country from a devastating war into a peaceful place all want to run to and call home.
Ladies, ladies, we have talents; we have the fear of God in us; we have the business sense in us; why are we still living as a second class citizen? We need to put more time into ourselves. We need to stop waiting for our men who are working to gain powers and titles and lead ourselves to the promise land that God intended us to have. We need to stop tearing each other down, and put an end to the "crab" way of living and network with each other to help us succeed.
As little girls growing up in Liberia, we were never taught to love ourselves, they told us to LOVE him. They showed us how to love and cared for our children; we were taught to look the other way when our men wrong us; we are lovers and caregivers by nature, but somewhere in the mix, we forgot about the person standing in the mirror looking back at us.
We will take our kids to each and every doctor’s appointment but some of us can not tell the last time we were there to see about ourselves. We were the second class citizens in Liberia back in the days, we had no voice, we spoke of no pain, no sorrows; we did what we were told to do good or bad big or small all for the sake of one day a Liberian man would ask us to be his wife.
As wives, we do everything we were trained to do, except they forgot to teach us how to love ourselves as a person; they forgot to tell us we might not get love in return; they forgot to show us what an abusive husband might do to us. They also did not mentioned the price of motherhood; the price of divorced and that it is ok to leave when things are not working out. Our mothers forgot to show us signs to know when our little girls are also been abuse by our husbands. They did not teach us how to cope with the helplessness of knowing your child is been abuse and there is nothing you can do without losing it all. They forgot to tell us even as an adult, we might still be beaten, cursed at and even thrown in the streets.
How could they have forgotten to tell us how painful our "first time" would be or the wonderful feeling you feel when you are making love to someone you truly love. They only told us to "lie down and open your legs". Yep, that was the beginning and the end of our sex talk from most of our parents. Some will even tell you to close your eyes as if that supposed to make things better. They did not tell us that love making is a way of connecting two people as one and the feeling should bring great satisfaction.
They left out the part of motherhood that says when you are a mother that does not mean the child is yours forever that sometimes God wants His child back. They forgot to warn us of the pain of losing a child;
They did not share with us what problems money can bring in our marriage; they told us "the money you make is for you, the money he makes is for you" so sharing our monies is something new that we are learning to do।

THEY FORGOT TO TELL US THAT BEEN MARRIED MEANS WE SHOULD ALSO BE CARED फॉर

I firmly believe that not knowing all the right "facts of life" we should have known from our parents, made us to create all the wrong doings I spoke about last week.

Just my $.02 cents for the day!
Have a blessed week.

Thanks,

Roberta BurkeWilliams

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Joke Of The Day

A little boy walks into his parents' room to see his mom on top of his dad bouncing up and down... the mom sees her son and quickly dismounts, worried about what her son has seen. She dresses quickly and goes to find him. The son sees his mom and asks, "What were you and Dad doing?" The mother replies, "Well, you know your dad has a big tummy and sometimes I have to get on top of itand help flatten it." "You’re wasting your time," said the boy. "Why is that?" the mom asked puzzled. "Well when you go shopping the lady next door comes over and gets on her knees and blows it right back up."

Liberians, I have few questions I would really like answers to

Please number your answer(s) to match the question(s)s you are answering.
1. What would happen if all of our Liberian non-for-profit organizations deleted their constitutions and by-laws? Most non-profit organizations outside of Liberians do not have constitutions and or by-laws. What would happen if we had no political jah-jah in our organizations?
2. What would happen if we did not put these titles before our Liberian people names? "His or Her Excellency", "Honorable", "chairperson", "Governor", and so forth and so on? If we call the president of Liberia, Mrs. Johnson-Sirleaf, what will happen to us after doing so and what is the reason behind these titles anyway? Most places will say: Mr. Bush, president of the USA, not His Excellency Bush!!
3. What would happen if we really wanted to help our country Liberia and did it this way; instead of having hundreds of Liberian organizations going NOWHERE FAST? What if we divided the Liberians living in America by States and divide them by Liberia counties and terrorities. Here’s my madness: Take Liberia nine counties plus five terrorities equal fourteen areas, hopefully it is still that number from when I left. Divide that into the fifty states, which will give you 3.57 states per Liberia area. Let say, all Liberians in the 3.57 states take on one of those counties or terrorities and get together to re-build the area. Do you think Liberia will be on her feet by the year 2012? Again: 9 + 5 = 14 ÷ 50 = 3.57.
4. What if all Liberian government officials had to public a monthly "job" progress report with evidences to all Liberian newspaper? Do you think they will put effort into their jobs? What would happen if the public had the power to fire them for not doing their jobs or not doing it according to their job descriptions?
5. What if the president of Liberia, Mrs. Johnson Sirleaf was to ask each adult Liberians living outside of Liberia to send $50.00US to help re-build the schools in Liberia; how much do you think would be collected and how many schools do you think will be in the position to compete with the western world by the year 2012?
Everyone please have a blessed day and remember to answer the questions you truly can relate to.