Who is iyanla




















She is the author of more than 10 self-helping books. Apart from writing books, Vanzant has appeared in several TV shows. Let you look below at how she did this all from being a simple girl. Her father, Horace Harris was a petty criminal, and her mother, Sarah Jefferson was a railroad car maid.

She then started living with her paternal relatives. Her childhood passed in troubles in a very uncomfortable. In search of a good living, she found a man to whom she felt in his love. Vanzant found herself pregnant at age of 16 and birthed 3 children by She married her loving man at 18 but he was physically abusive and thus she left him in In a fit of depression, I attempted suicide.

Although her family members were against her education, she ignored everyone in the focus of her dream. She later enrolled in Virginia Union University to pursue her graduation. From there, she graduated with a Bachelor of Arts BA degree. Vanzant dreamed to become a lawyer and therefore she joined the City University of New York, Queens to pursue her law education. She later earned a law degree, Juris Doctor JD. She continued her job for the next three years and later left it in Her works in the legal field led her to write a book name Tapping the Power Within A Path to Self-Empowerment for Black Women which teaches pre-employment skills to marginalized women.

The book was originally published on 1 May Shortly, she released 15 titles of which four of them were listed on the New York Times Best Sellers list. The best part is, she teaches what she has learned. Born in Brooklyn, New York in the back of a taxi cab to an alcoholic mother, Iyanla was a child of an extra martial affair. When Iyanla was two-years-old her mother succumbed to breast cancer. This left Iyanla and her older brother to be raised by father, who left his children in the care of a series a relatives, including an uncle who raped her at the tender age of nine.

Although Iyanla knew her father, he was often not present physically and emotionally unavailable. By age 16, she was a teenage mother. By age 21 she had three children and a physically abusive husband. Being a single mother, she sustained her family for several years on public assistance. Her brilliant oratory skills caught the attention of the Philadelphia Public Defender's office who offered her a job without a formal interview. Three years into her practice, Iyanla knew she had made the wrong choice for her life and left her position.

Like everyone else, Iyanla readily admits that she too has had long periods of confusion. Unlike many, however, she uses her difficult times to usher her into a new state of being. After leaving her prominent position as an attorney, Iyanla eventually found herself unemployed, sleeping on a sofa in a friend's basement with her pregnant 16 year-old daughter. It was important, she said, for women to have discovered who they were so they would have made their decisions accordingly.

However, Iyanla has said that who she was has had nothing to do with her having been raped by her uncle at age nine. Nor did Iyanla see herself as having been crushed by the nine years spent in an abusive marriage before she found the strength to leave it. She has said that being a welfare recipient did not make her the person she has become.

Nor did Iyanla define herself by a successful career as a public defender, spiritual counselor, best-selling author, or doting grandmother. So just who is Iyanla Vanzant? In a phone interview with Dietrich Gruen she said, "I used to be just another Black woman, but today I am a child of God! This means I am unique, but I am not special. I am an ordinary person who is dedicated to doing very special things. On the back cover of Faith in the Valley , fellow author and soul mate Julia Boyd commended her sister in the faith, whose message "comes right from the heart and goes straight to the soul.

Iyanla truly loves and cares about us sisters and it shows. Vanzant went on to establish herself as a best-selling author, with more than , in sales of Acts of Faith and , of The Value in the Valley Vanzant's later books have been lined up with mainstream publishers, with a promise of more in This book provided a blend of ancient African spirituality, practical self-help advice, and contemporary faith.

This effective blend has stimulated self-knowledge and courage for Black men in the struggles, crises, and victories they experienced in confronting the powerful social, political, and economic forces at work against them.

The best-selling author who has empowered countless Black women has also reached out to women of all races, all who have yearned for love. About what it takes for men and women surviving the current gender wars in a successful marriage, Vanzant has this to say, "When your life is working, it is not a dramatic production.

We have to break our addiction to drama and crisis. And we have to stop competing. Vanzant was honored "Alumni of the Year" in by the National Association for Equal Opportunity in Education, an organization made up of the presidents and administrators of the predominantly Black colleges in America.

As one of the nation's "unsung heroes," she was given the "Oni" award by the International Congress of Black Women. The next year she served as a national spokesperson for the Literacy Volunteers of America. Vanzant continued to reach out to as many people as possible. In the late s and early s, she was a regular guest speaker on The Oprah Winfrey Show.

In she hosted her own talk show for ABC.



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