Monday, July 14, 2025

 

Against All Odds: A Story of Hope and Perseverance

Chapter 1: The Beginning

Marcus was born on a rainy Tuesday in a cramped two-bedroom apartment that housed six people. His mother, Sarah, was only nineteen when she welcomed her third child into a world that seemed determined to keep them down. The apartment walls were thin enough that you could hear the neighbors arguing, and the heating only worked sporadically, but it was home.

Sarah worked two jobs—cleaning offices at night and stocking shelves during the day—while Marcus's grandmother watched over him and his four siblings. There was never enough food, never enough space, never enough time. But there was always enough love, and Sarah made sure of that.

"Education," she would whisper to Marcus as she tucked him into the fold-out couch they shared, "is the one thing no one can take away from you."

Chapter 2: The Seed of Hope

At age seven, Marcus discovered the public library. While other kids played in the streets, he found sanctuary among the books. The librarian, Mrs. Chen, noticed the small boy who came in every day after school, always polite, always curious.

"What are you reading today, Marcus?" she'd ask.

"Everything," he'd reply, his eyes bright with possibility.

Books became his escape and his weapon. He read about scientists and inventors, about kids who grew up poor and changed the world. Each story planted a seed: maybe, just maybe, he could be different.

But life had other plans.

Chapter 3: The First Detour

When Marcus was twelve, his mother got sick. The factory where she worked had no health insurance, and the medical bills piled up like snow in winter. Marcus watched his straight-A report cards become secondary to survival.

He started working after school, bagging groceries for $4.25 an hour. His teachers noticed his grades slipping, his attention wandering. Mrs. Rodriguez, his eighth-grade teacher, pulled him aside.

"Marcus, what's happening? You're one of the brightest students I've ever taught."

He wanted to tell her about the eviction notice taped to their door, about eating cereal for dinner three nights in a row, about his mother crying quietly in the bathroom. Instead, he just shrugged.

"I'm fine, Mrs. Rodriguez. Just tired."

But she didn't give up on him. She arranged for him to do homework in her classroom after school, brought him sandwiches, and reminded him daily that his mind was his greatest asset.

Chapter 4: The Scholarship

High school brought new challenges. Marcus's family moved three times in two years, each apartment smaller than the last. He changed schools twice, lost credits, and watched his dream of college grow dimmer.

Then came the letter.

"Marcus Williams," the envelope read, "you have been selected as a finalist for the Henderson Academic Excellence Scholarship."

His hands shook as he read the details. Full tuition, room and board, books. Everything he'd dreamed of but never dared hope for.

The interview was in a building downtown that was taller than any he'd ever entered. The panel of judges looked at his secondhand suit and worn shoes, but they saw something else too—the fire in his eyes, the determination in his voice.

"Why do you want this scholarship, Marcus?"

"Because I believe education can break cycles," he said. "And I have a cycle to break."

Chapter 5: The Stumble

College was everything Marcus had imagined and nothing like he'd prepared for. His roommate had a car, a laptop, and clothes that cost more than Marcus's family spent on groceries in a month. Marcus had three shirts, a determination that burned like a coal fire, and a work-study job in the cafeteria.

He excelled in his classes but struggled socially. The cultural gap felt like a canyon. When his classmates talked about spring break trips to Europe, Marcus was sending his work-study earnings home to help with his little sister's school supplies.

Sophomore year, the call came at 2 AM.

"Marcus, you need to come home. Your mother's in the hospital."

He packed everything he owned in twenty minutes and took a Greyhound bus that seemed to stop in every small town between his university and home. Sarah had collapsed at work—exhaustion, malnutrition, and a heart that had carried too much weight for too long.

"I have to drop out," Marcus told the financial aid officer. "My family needs me."

But Sarah had other plans. From her hospital bed, she gripped his hand with surprising strength.

"If you come home now, everything I've sacrificed means nothing. You go back to school. You finish what we started."

Chapter 6: The Long Road

The next two years were a blur of late nights, early mornings, and a constant balancing act. Marcus took extra classes to graduate early, worked two jobs to send money home, and somehow maintained a 3.8 GPA.

He tutored other students, participated in research projects, and applied for every scholarship and grant he could find. When his laptop died, he wrote papers by hand and typed them in the computer lab. When he couldn't afford textbooks, he camped out in the library and copied pages by hand.

His professors noticed his dedication. Dr. James, his economics professor, became a mentor.

"Marcus, you have something special. Not just intelligence, but resilience. That's rarer than you think."

Senior year, three graduate schools offered him full scholarships. He chose the one closest to home, where he could continue to help his family while pursuing his master's degree.

Chapter 7: The Breakthrough

At twenty-five, Marcus stood before a room full of investors, presenting his thesis research on micro-finance solutions for low-income communities. His hands still shook—not from nerves, but from the weight of possibility.

"Mr. Williams," one investor asked, "what makes you think this will work?"

Marcus smiled, thinking of his mother, of Mrs. Chen, of Mrs. Rodriguez, of all the people who had believed in him when he couldn't believe in himself.

"Because I've lived it," he said. "I know what it's like to have potential trapped by circumstances. And I know what happens when someone gives you a chance."

Six months later, Marcus received a fellowship to start his own nonprofit organization. His first hire was Mrs. Rodriguez, who had retired from teaching but wasn't ready to stop changing lives.

Chapter 8: Full Circle

Today, Marcus's organization has helped over 10,000 families access education funding. He still lives modestly, still remembers the taste of cereal for dinner, still sends money home to his mother—though now it's to help her start the small business she'd always dreamed of.

His office wall has only one decoration: a photo of his family from when he was seven, all six of them crowded together on that fold-out couch. Next to it, a framed quote from his mother: "Education is the one thing no one can take away from you."

Marcus often speaks to groups of young people facing similar challenges. He tells them his story not to inspire pity, but to plant seeds of possibility.

"The road isn't straight," he tells them. "It's full of detours, obstacles, and moments when you want to quit. But every time you choose to keep going, you're not just changing your own life—you're changing the trajectory of everyone who comes after you."

Epilogue: The Ripple Effect

Marcus's youngest sister, Maria, is now a doctor. His brother Carlos teaches at the same elementary school Marcus attended. His mother Sarah runs a small catering business that employs six people from their old neighborhood.

The cycle wasn't just broken—it was transformed into something beautiful.

And somewhere in the city, a seven-year-old boy discovers the public library for the first time, picks up a book, and dreams of possibilities that seem impossible.

The story continues.


"Hope is not about everything being perfect. Hope is about believing that your next step matters, even when you can't see where the path leads." - Marcus Williams

Wednesday, April 22, 2020

Fact 1,SARS-Covd-2 has been in the making for years. 2, virologist in USA, Canada and China worked on this virus together even after it was deemed too dangerous to continue 3, first started this deconstruction & re-engineering in US lab 4, Dr.Fauchi & BG were funding it! Then they moved it to the Wuhan lab and continued to increase its gain of function! Making it a super spreader virus that literally can't be vaccinated against. So Dr. Fauci & BG & OTHERS KNEW THIS VIRUS BEFORE IT EVEN LEFT THE LAB. Plus BG is the biggest funder of the WHO.

Saturday, March 28, 2020

New World Order

Never before have governments had so much power over the people, though in these emergency conditions, that might not be an entirely bad thing for the time being seeing as how it could very well be necessary for our survival.
The problem, however, is that these newly assumed powers probably won’t be voluntarily surrendered after this epidemic ends, which is why many people are so concerned. They’re convinced that we’ve suddenly entered a period of global dictatorship, and it’s difficult to argue with them.
So much else is also changing as well, and it’s hard to keep up with the “COVID World Order” that’s been thrust upon us, but what follows is an attempt to briefly describe everything that’s already taken place and predict what will probably follow:

1. DE-FACTO MARTIAL LAW…

There’s no other way to describe both the “recommended” and mandatory quarantines that many in the world are experiencing than to call them what they are, a state of de-facto martial law, which isn’t being formally declared in order to not provoke any more panic than there already is.

2. …IS THE “NEW NORMAL”

Now that de-facto martial law of a seemingly indefinite period has been accepted by the people (whether willingly or begrudgingly), it’ll probably become the “new normal” and be implemented countless times in the future, be it as an “overabundance of caution” in the event of another outbreak or under any other pretext.

3. SOCIAL MEDIA CENSORSHIP WILL INTENSIFY

“Big Brother” is already here, but he’s going to become a bigger bully than ever before by intensifying his censorship of people’s social media posts on the basis that they’re “socially irresponsible” (e.g. questioning the seriousness of this disease), after which the “politically incorrect” net will widen to encompass other topics too.

4. TRAVEL WILL NEVER BE THE SAME AGAIN

Domestic and international travel will never be the same again, with internal restrictions on movement likely becoming commonplace and most foreign guests being required to self-quarantine for a period of time except in special circumstances, thus all but killing the global tourism industry.

5. BORDER CONTROL WILL BECOME MORE ROBUST

Gone are the days of so-called “open borders” where anyone can freely move between jurisdictions at will (whether legally or otherwise), with more stringent controls being put into place to protect the local population from outsiders (including their own compatriots from elsewhere in the country).

6. MANDATORY VACCINES ARE COMING

For whatever one thinks about vaccines, there’s probably no way to stop them from becoming mandatory after the COVID-19 pandemic, with it being predicted that people will have to prove that they’ve been vaccinated in order to do anything at all such as study, work, travel, and receive government benefits.

7. REMOTE LEARNING & WORKING WILL INCREASE

With so many people stuck at home and unable to leave except to purchase essential goods in most cases, it’s predictable that remote learning and working (the latter which will of course be for those whose jobs allow them to do so) will pick up in the coming future as society gets used to this way of doing things.

8. 5G IS INEVITABLE

The massive surge of online traffic from folks who are learning, working, or simply entertaining themselves online will necessitate the rapid roll-out of 5G technology despite what some people suspect are its serious health concerns.

9. SOCIETY DEPENDS ON JUST A FEW JOBS TO FUNCTION

The “new normal” of de-facto martial law has made many people realize that society really just depends on a few jobs in order to continue functioning at the bare minimum, with these being techies, grocery store and pharmacy employees, bank clerks, healthcare professionals, food service workers, farmers, and truckers.

10. NATIONALIZATION MIGHT BE IMMINENT

For better or for worse, governments across the world might go on a nationalization spree in order to take control of what they regard as “essential industries” (though whether some of them truly are or not is another story), which could lead to the informal imposition of either socialist or fascist economic models.

11. “UNIVERSAL BASIC INCOME”

Given the scale and scope of the global economic collapse that was catalyzed by the world’s uncoordinated response to COVID-19, it’s foreseeable that governments will unveil what’s been described as a “universal basic income” in order to ensure that their people can continue to at least purchase basic goods and services.

12. MANDATORY MEDICAL TRAINING IN EXCHANGE FOR GOVERNMENT BENEFITS

Medical training is arguably more important than military service nowadays, so the state will probably make it mandatory in schools from here on out and for anyone who wants to receive government benefits, thereby enabling the government to draft them in the future whenever there’s a dearth of healthcare professionals.

13. SAY GOODBYE TO CASH

The cashless society is coming, whether justified by the (real, false, or exaggerated) fear that lethal viruses can be spread by paper currency or as the government’s preferred method of dispersing its “universal basic income”, meaning that the authorities can cut folks off from their funds at any time that they want to.

Tuesday, June 25, 2019


The Curse of Ham (Black Slavery)
Most slave owners in Europe were Christians, and they used the Bible to defend their slave's ownership. For instance, they developed “The Curse of Ham” analogy from Noah’s story to justify human slavery but dropped Canaan. “When Noah awoke from his wine and found out what his youngest son (Ham) had done to him. He said Cursed be Canaan! (Ham was the father of Canaan) The lowest of slaves will he be to his brothers (Japheth and Shem)” Genesis 9:21. Ham was made the black man while his descendants made African. The Christian novel of reference says that Noah had cursed Ham and his descendants into being slaves to Japheth and Sham. They concluded that this gave the right to own slaves and treat them as they wish.
                             
                              African Slaves Ready for Shipment to Europe.

The black slaves were considered the property of the white man. The males would do hard labor like farming, building fences, or carrying heavy loads. The woman and children would help the master’s wife with house chores such as cleaning the house and taking care of the babies. Slaves would work for long hour with little or no food. When they got sick, they will receive little or no medical care. The white master would use slaves as collateral for loans. Surprisingly, the masters will encourage slaves to procreate and give birth to more slaves to be sold when fully mature. Family ties was of no importance to the black slave. Women, husbands and children would be separated and never meet again.
                                
                                       Public Whipping of Disobedient Slaves

They also manipulated the slaves against any revolt using their novel reading verses from Paul’s Epistles that instructed them to be obedient to their masters as a way of “pleasing god.” (Romans 13:1-7). Any form of disobedience was met with full force from the master regardless of gender or age. A total submission was required as slaves were punished by whipping, shackling, beating, mutilation, branding, or imprisonment. Perceived disobedience or infractions was tantamount to death among the slaves. However, the white masters sometimes abuse slaves to instill fear or assert dominance. Scars of Peter whipped Louisiana slave, 1863. 
                                         
An escaped slave named Peter showing his scarred back at a medical examination facility in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, 1863.

Pregnancy was not a barrier to punishment; new methods were coined to administer lashings without harming the baby. Slaves masters would dig a hole big enough for the women’s stomach to lie in and proceed with the lashings. The mistreatment of slaves frequently included rape and the sexual abuse of women. The sexual abuse of slaves was partially rooted in historical Southern culture and its view of the enslaved as property. After 1662, when Virginia adopted the legal doctrine Partus Sequitur Ventrem, where sexual relations between white men and black women were regulated by classifying children of slave mothers as slaves regardless of their father’s race or status. Particularly in the upper South. A population of mixed-race (mulatto) offspring emerged. However, the white Southern society claimed to abhor miscegenation and punished sexual relations between white women and black men as damaging the “racial purity.”

                            
              African Slaves From West Africa ready for Exodus to Europe.
Slaveholders feared slave rebellions and attempted to escape. They minimized slaves’ exposure to the outside world to reduce the risk of protest. Education of slaves was generally discouraged for fear that knowledge and literacy would cause rebelliousness. During the early 17th century, some colonies permitted slaves who converted to Christianity to become free, but this possibility was eliminated by the mid-17th century. Nevertheless, slaves throughout the American South created hybrid forms of Christianity, mixing elements of traditional African religions with the new interpretations of Christianity. Unfortunately, South Carolina permitted law enforcement to disband any religious meeting where more than half the participants were black.
                                           
                                           Slave's Brutality during Exodus

               
                                          

In the 15th century, the Catholic church under Pope Alexander VI conspired to whiten the religious by making the portrait of his son Cesare Borgia as the image of Christian’s white imaginary friend (Jesus). With the help of his gay lover (Leonardo Da Vinci), Cesare Borgia became the image of modern-day Jesus Christ. The image can trace from the famous Last Supper painting by Da Vinci. As of today, in your churches and home is the image of Cesare Borgia. Generally, Christianity was slavery and colonialism whose effects were physical abuse, torture, rape, discrimination, anti-women, and objectifying women as sexual properties. To date, Whites treat blacks as inferior. What a religion of peace!

                      
                             Cesare Borgia Image and Perceived Christ Image


                      
            Leonardo Da Vinci Last Supper Painting commissioned by the Duke of Florence.

                                      
                                                    African Slaves On the Ship
                                                 
                                               
                                                          We Thank Thy


Wednesday, May 29, 2019


The Cradle of Human Existence.

Africa indeed is the cradle of human origin. Human civilization began in Africa thousands of years ago, which has been proven by various archaeological evidence. African civilization is measured by the quality of human interaction and not the height of tall buildings created by African Kings.

                       

According to Charles Darwin (On the Origin of Species), the first man known as Dryopithecus who looked like an ape primate or a modern-day gorilla existed in Africa and Eurasia (Asia). The fossils remain of early man were first found in East Africa along Lake Victoria basin. Archaeologists have argued that the East Africa climatic condition at the time were favorable for early man survival. The area was surrounded by thick vegetation and wild animals that serve as man's food.

                                   
                                               Evolution of Man

The early man practiced hunting and gathering as a way of survival. They lived in a state of nature where you hunt or get hunted. Therefore, they moved and hunted in groups to ensured they get all the support and security to subdue the enemy. Interestingly, the early man considered competition as a direct threat, and he would kill the child if the women ignored him. Additionally, the man would not allow intruders to his group without a fight. Scientists have stated that the early man possessed aggressive genes which predisposed them to constant fights when lest provoked.

                                      
                                      A Typical Early Man's Family

The early man developed a unique mode of communication used to warn others of incoming danger. Signal the birth of a new member or death and funeral announcements. Notably, early man had a special way of worshiping a supreme deity. They understood that there was a strong force of nature that control all that exists. Therefore, they selected a special place of worshiping such as mountains top, inside the caves, and along the riverbanks.  The gods came in different forms like the sun, the moon, or animals.
          
         Apelike Face of an Early Man


        
        African Man

Wednesday, May 22, 2019


"Africa" My Mother Land


Africa is known for its vast culture based on their mode of dressing, religious practice, face painting, rites of passage, foods, music, and languages. All African communities have their unique way of dressing, which differentiates one community from another. They also have different items of clothing for every occasion such as childbirth, weddings, and burials. Elderly people dress different from youths while mothers dress differently from young ladies. Dressing in African culture portrays levels of seniority in the community as well as status.

Face painting is often associated with rites of passage. For instance, the Kipsigis and Luhya tribes found in Kenya paint their entire body during circumcision rites.  The Maa community (Maasai) paint their face during their traditional wedding ceremony. Additionally, the Himba people of Namibia cover their body with a mixture of milk fat and red soil, which makes the skin reddish. This beauty mixture is considered a beauty cosmetic. Due to scarcity of water in the Namibia desert, the Himba use wood ash to clean their hair.

           
        Manhood initiation Ceremony among the Luhya

          
                  A Himba Girl 
              

Music in Africa is critical as songs are sung during farming, wedding, burial, childbirth, circumcision, and used to make the child sleep. Drums are employed often during the singing as well as thumb piano and rattles made from dried seeds. African indeed is a melting pot of cultures. The beauty in diversity is immeasurable and it is our duty to explore and enjoy these beauties.  
      

African Diversity In Pictures

   




  Against All Odds: A Story of Hope and Perseverance Chapter 1: The Beginning Marcus was born on a rainy Tuesday in a cramped two-bedroom ...