Echoes of the Baobab Tree of Life : Some Things Should Not Be Secret (2014, Paperback, Revised, Expanded) by read online PDF, FB2, DOC
9780967810133 English 0967810132 'Echoes of the Baobab Tree of Life: Some Things Should not be Secret? captures motivation, history and human interests. The book explores Africa's indigenous baobab tree, from on both sides of the Atlantic, and uncovers a missing link in time when countries pursued colonization of other countries and lands. The book ties botany and slavery, horticulture and history. It also ties what was the Trans-Atlantic crossings; slave owners and slaves. For slave owners and colonizers the baobab tree was ?curiosity;? the slaves, however, knew the baobab tree was one other means of communication embedded in their culture; it was a way of life that even journeying across the Atlantic to foreign soil could not dismiss. From the Western Hemisphere, the baobab tree requires a different approach. The environment is different. The cultures too, though similar, are different. In Echoes of the Baobab Tree of Life: Some Things should not Be Secret, the baobab inspires for true success. The information and communication piques interest into the psychological nature of the baobab tree, then it engages the tough-minded for tough decisions about life, make tough calls about their own individual motivations and pursue their goals as well as gold. With calculated and careful insight observing the baobab from the Western Hemisphere, and with careful, calculated analysis and assessment from much information I have gathered researching the baobab tree: There is intrinsic value and entrenched motivation to inspire any reader for something new when (old things) and all, ?seemingly,? attempts fail. Few of the lessons a reader will learn from the very nature of the eccentric baobab tree is that it is self-sustaining, self-driven, and self-empowered. The baobab teaches the lesson of discipline. From the baobab tree, chronic whiners and complainers will learn how not to accentuate problems but find the oasis in the desert where water is: Water is life. Creative ingredients belie the minerals available for disposal and use. From the insightful contents of this book, move from mediocrity to self-improvement. Honker down; let the roots go down; locate the power of your strength., Echoes of the Baobab Tree of Life: Some Things Should not Be Silent, is a hybrid book integrating human interests with an indigenous tree from Africa brought to the Caribbean, North, South, Central and Latin America and/or the Western Hemisphere. In various parts of Africa, the baobab lends itself to serving an entire ecosystem; in the Western Hemisphere, the serve of the baobab is different. Out of sheer "curiosity" is one principal reason colonizers did transplanted and grow baobabs; they project important lessons for any entrepreneur and for anyone aspiring to true success. Hence, from the Western Hemisphere a new innovative, at the same time, controversial, approach need be in discussion and such engagement must occur without compromising or losing sight of the fundamental essence, value and multipurpose use of the baobab tree. Meshing the facts, however, it is understandably clear that colonizers brought the baobab across the Trans-Atlantic, aboard the same ships that more than 250,000 slaves aboard, per year, shared with slave owners. Human interest dovetails into horticulture, ecology and botany as the baobab serves the ecosystem. Stepping out of this botanic environment, however, slavery, psychology, ecology, botany, horticulture, history, economics and many other areas of human interests come together. As the cross section of human interests come together to mesh on the very nature of the eccentric but self-sustaining, self-driven, self-empowered baobab tree, readers can learn the discipline of what it takes to survive in good and bad times. Often, what most people accentuate are problems, but from the baobab tree, the lessons to learn is find where water is--Water is life. Find where creative ingredients belie then draw from the minerals available for disposal and use. Once applied, the result is self-improvement, self-development. The result is developing, uncovering, locating, discovering, harnessing and exercising the ingredients and power that enables for going over the top, that makes strong, that empowers. Here is what the baobab serves as a reminder. The lesson is in one sign that read: "Power is nothing without control." Is it not time that you control your rise or fall?
9780967810133 English 0967810132 'Echoes of the Baobab Tree of Life: Some Things Should not be Secret? captures motivation, history and human interests. The book explores Africa's indigenous baobab tree, from on both sides of the Atlantic, and uncovers a missing link in time when countries pursued colonization of other countries and lands. The book ties botany and slavery, horticulture and history. It also ties what was the Trans-Atlantic crossings; slave owners and slaves. For slave owners and colonizers the baobab tree was ?curiosity;? the slaves, however, knew the baobab tree was one other means of communication embedded in their culture; it was a way of life that even journeying across the Atlantic to foreign soil could not dismiss. From the Western Hemisphere, the baobab tree requires a different approach. The environment is different. The cultures too, though similar, are different. In Echoes of the Baobab Tree of Life: Some Things should not Be Secret, the baobab inspires for true success. The information and communication piques interest into the psychological nature of the baobab tree, then it engages the tough-minded for tough decisions about life, make tough calls about their own individual motivations and pursue their goals as well as gold. With calculated and careful insight observing the baobab from the Western Hemisphere, and with careful, calculated analysis and assessment from much information I have gathered researching the baobab tree: There is intrinsic value and entrenched motivation to inspire any reader for something new when (old things) and all, ?seemingly,? attempts fail. Few of the lessons a reader will learn from the very nature of the eccentric baobab tree is that it is self-sustaining, self-driven, and self-empowered. The baobab teaches the lesson of discipline. From the baobab tree, chronic whiners and complainers will learn how not to accentuate problems but find the oasis in the desert where water is: Water is life. Creative ingredients belie the minerals available for disposal and use. From the insightful contents of this book, move from mediocrity to self-improvement. Honker down; let the roots go down; locate the power of your strength., Echoes of the Baobab Tree of Life: Some Things Should not Be Silent, is a hybrid book integrating human interests with an indigenous tree from Africa brought to the Caribbean, North, South, Central and Latin America and/or the Western Hemisphere. In various parts of Africa, the baobab lends itself to serving an entire ecosystem; in the Western Hemisphere, the serve of the baobab is different. Out of sheer "curiosity" is one principal reason colonizers did transplanted and grow baobabs; they project important lessons for any entrepreneur and for anyone aspiring to true success. Hence, from the Western Hemisphere a new innovative, at the same time, controversial, approach need be in discussion and such engagement must occur without compromising or losing sight of the fundamental essence, value and multipurpose use of the baobab tree. Meshing the facts, however, it is understandably clear that colonizers brought the baobab across the Trans-Atlantic, aboard the same ships that more than 250,000 slaves aboard, per year, shared with slave owners. Human interest dovetails into horticulture, ecology and botany as the baobab serves the ecosystem. Stepping out of this botanic environment, however, slavery, psychology, ecology, botany, horticulture, history, economics and many other areas of human interests come together. As the cross section of human interests come together to mesh on the very nature of the eccentric but self-sustaining, self-driven, self-empowered baobab tree, readers can learn the discipline of what it takes to survive in good and bad times. Often, what most people accentuate are problems, but from the baobab tree, the lessons to learn is find where water is--Water is life. Find where creative ingredients belie then draw from the minerals available for disposal and use. Once applied, the result is self-improvement, self-development. The result is developing, uncovering, locating, discovering, harnessing and exercising the ingredients and power that enables for going over the top, that makes strong, that empowers. Here is what the baobab serves as a reminder. The lesson is in one sign that read: "Power is nothing without control." Is it not time that you control your rise or fall?