There's a lot that I still have not done. A lot of places that I would like to visit. I live in America, the land that provides opportunity to be all that you can be. However, being a black woman in America, the road to success is not easy and is sometimes blocked.
During my journey to success, I used what my parents taught me. Be strong when one road is blocked; look for another way to accomplish my dreams. I always put God first in my life. Doing this, goals can be accomplished.
This book was written to encourage other young girls who become with child when they are just a child themselves, to know that they can keep their child and still be successful. It is not easy.
We were put here on earth to accomplish a mission. Life is not always what we want it to be, but we can find daily joy. Though some of us may never find a lifetime partner, God says we are never alone.
Dirt Farmer's Daughter points out the road of success, telling how one girl rose from a dirt-poor existence to earn a quarter of a million dollars a year. This book shows the challenges, the broken trust, places traveled, and people encountered through the journey. It explains how power, strength, and courage can keep you moving forward.
(About the Author)
As a child, Daisy (West) DuBose lived in the countryside in Virginia and North Carolina. "At age 15, my family and I moved to Norfolk, Virginia. I am presently on an assignment working in Kuwait at the age of 76." The author is a contract specialist with an MBA from Central Michigan University.