Showing posts with label Church Talk. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Church Talk. Show all posts

Apr 22, 2026

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There are two things that can be true at once:


You can admire someone’s drive…

and still question the system around them.

And that’s exactly where many people landed with Coach Stormy Wellington 




From Pressure to Power


Born in New York City and raised in Miami, Florida, Stormy Wellington’s story is not polished—it’s powerful.


She dropped out of high school in the ninth grade… and still built an empire.




Not just any empire—one rooted in direct sales and network marketing, where she rose to become a top distributor for Farmasi.


Her accolades speak loudly:

First African American leader to reach the prestigious President rank at Farmasi
Named the #1 female network marketer globally by Business for Home
Founder of Girl Hold My Hand Inc.
Star of Million Dollar Hustle on Lifetime




She’s also an author, with books like The Quiet Storm and 9 Laws of Success pouring into women who are ready to level up.


But let’s not dilute it.




Stormy is not soft-spoken.


She is:

Direct

Raw

Unapologetic

A no-nonsense coach in every sense of the word.


And whether you love it or hate it… her message hits.


The Energy That Builds… and Breaks


Here’s the truth most people don’t say out loud:


The same energy that builds influence can also create resistance.


Stormy doesn’t coddle.

She doesn’t chase.

And if you’re not executing?


She’s not waiting on you.


That kind of leadership?

It produces results—but it also creates friction.


Especially with audiences who may not be ready for that level of accountability.


When Motivation Meets Reality


Now here’s where it gets real.


Coach Stormy was sued by the Federal Trade Commission (FTC).


The core issue?


Allegations that income potential within her business opportunity was presented in a way that may have been misleading.


The claims suggested that recruits could earn:


Six figures
Seven figures
Even millions in a relatively short time


These messages were communicated through:

Social media
YouTube
Marketing content


But the FTC brought data to the table:

In some cases, 76.8% of participants earned nothing
In others, less than 1% reached six figures


So while the message was:
“You can get rich.”


The reality for most people was:
“You probably won’t.”


And that gap?


That’s where legal problems live.




Let’s Talk Truth (Even If It’s Uncomfortable)


Not everyone is going to win.


Let’s be honest:


Some people don’t work
Some people quit too early
Some people lack the discipline required


And if you’ve ever listened to Stormy, you know one thing she does emphasize:


👉 You have to WORK.



From personal observation, she didn’t hand out guarantees.


She showed:

What’s possible
What her lifestyle looks like
The grind it took to get there
The level of commitment required


So this situation isn’t black and white.


It’s layered.


Because there’s a difference between:

Selling a dream… and selling a probability.



The Settlement: Structure Over Hype


Coach Stormy ultimately settled the case.


Which means:


Income claims must now be truthful and backed by evidence
Marketing must reflect realistic outcomes—not just best-case scenarios


And honestly?


That’s not a loss.


That’s alignment.


Because now:

The message has to match the math.


One thing that stood out to me?


She didn’t crumble under pressure.


She leaned into her faith, declaring:
“No weapon formed against me shall prosper.”


That says everything.


She’s not folding.


She’s recalibrating.


And if you understand anything about women like Stormy, you know this:


They don’t disappear in storms.


They rename them.


So we are looking for more Faith, Fire, and Forward Motivation from Coach Stormy 



Apr 5, 2026

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So it’s been a minute since I actually sat down and watched The Real Housewives of Atlanta. Life been lifing, bills been billing—you know how it goes.


But the other day, I’m just minding my business, scrolling on Instagram like a good citizen, and boom—here comes a clip of Kandi Burruss.


And baby…


She was READY. 👀


I mean, she was giving full instructions like it was a team meeting:
Talking to Kenya Moore like,
"If this fight pop off, don’t interfere."


Now hold on.



Not instructions.
Not a game plan.
Not a pre-fight strategy session on a pre-recorded show.

I had to pause the video like—


“Wait… Kandi? OUR God-fearing Kandi??”


I am like now where is that Don Juan???


Now see… here’s where it gets even more interesting, and I had to clutch my invisible pearls just a little bit. 


Because word on the curb is that Kandi Burruss—fresh out of that divorce—allegedly went ahead and cut the check upfront.




And not a cute little check either, baby.


We’re talking about a lump sum somewhere over $400K… plus FIVE luxury cars.






Sis said, take this and go in peace.”




 Because Let’s Be Clear… She could do that!



SO don’t get me wrong—I love me some Kandi.



She is:

49 and Gorgeous ✔️
a certified boss ✔️
multi-stream income having ✔️
wrote songs you still sing in the shower ✔️


Sis got money on money… on money. And I am not just speaking about her bank account. I'm talking about her consciousness.




Which is exactly why I am confused.




🤨 The Comments Had Me Weak AND Weirded out Though

Now I slide down to the comments (because that’s where the real ministry happens), and folks talking about:


“Yeah Kandi will fight.”
“Oh she don’t play.”
“She bout that life.”


And I just sat there like…


Really?



That’s what we celebrating?


Not her business acumen.
Not her longevity.
Not her empire.




…but the fact that she’ll throw hands?


Oh no, we got to come higher than this.




Girl… This Is Beneath You and The Pay Grade The Lord Has Blessed You With (Respectfully)




And when I say that, I mean that with love and a little Southern side-eye.



Because at this stage in life—
this age,

this type of legacy we building
this level of success,
this tax bracket—


Fighting should not even be an option on your menu.




Like ma’am… you are not an appetizer. You are a full-course investment and brand.




You don’t risk:

  • your brand
  • your endorsements
  • your peace
  • your legacy


…over a moment that’s going to be replayed more times than your greatest hits.


Now what's done is done. And we now understand to not come for you.



Let’s Elevate the Energy


If anything, this is the season for:

  • cutting people off with class
  • reading folks with vocabulary, not violence
  • and exiting situations like your time is expensive (because it is)



Because truth be told?

The real flex is self-control.

Anybody can pop off.

But it takes a woman who knows her worth to say,
“Yeah… I’m not doing this with you.”



Kandi, sis… we love you down.

But fighting? No Ma'am.


At 49?
With millions?
On camera?



Baby no.


That is beneath you, behind you, and honestly… a little too cheap for the lifestyle you’ve built.


Let them argue.
Let them perform.


You? You collect checks and keep it cute.



Now that’s the kind of energy we need to see. 

Jan 7, 2026

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There has been much conversation surrounding the dress—the now-infamous dress that has sparked outrage, judgment, defense, sermons, and side-eyes all at once. And as I watched the discourse unfold, my mind immediately went to the story of Esther.



In the Book of Esther, King Xerxes summons Queen Vashti to appear before him—many scholars believe unclothed or at least in a humiliating, objectifying way. Vashti refuses. Because of her disobedience, she is divorced and stripped of her title as queen.




What’s interesting is how this story is often handled from the pulpit.




Many of the same dignitaries and leaders who are now publicly condemning Dr. Karri Baby’s appearance will also stand in sermons and justify the king’s decision against Vashti. Her refusal is framed as rebellion. His response is framed as order. And rarely do we sit long enough with the complexity of that moment—or the cost of either choice.




So when I see Dr. Karri Baby at the center of public critique, I wonder if part of the truth is simply this: maybe she wanted to live a little. Maybe she wanted to have fun with "her husband".






But she must understand and recognize  that it doesn’t exempt her from critique, it does remind us that freedom always comes with consequences—especially when lived out loud.




And this is where my own mixed emotions come in.


Because I am the woman who plays her rap music loud on the highway while wearing her prophet’s garments and ring. And sometimes on the way to church. I use it to attract people to me and witness.  




I am also the woman who wears fitted, sexy gym clothes when I work out.
I am the woman who believes in holiness—and also believes in looking good for her husband.




And yes, there was a season in my life when I had fun breaking the rules. I enjoyed my freedom. I pushed boundaries. And I was also judged for it. But I don't know if I would have worn this dress.


Okay maybe for a night out with bae...




But in the past... I didn't pretend to be shocked when others had opinions. Sometimes I explained my reasoning and sometimes I didn't.



At the same time, I won’t pretend—I didn’t feel a check in my spirit. Not condemnation. Not discomfort. Because intention matters. Context matters. Covering matters. And while I firmly believe women should never be reduced to their bodies or their clothing, I also believe discernment is wisdom, not oppression.




Salvation is personal. Each of us must answer for our own convictions. That said, Scripture also reminds us to be mindful not to cause one another to stumble. 




There is a tension there—because while we are not responsible for managing everyone else’s desires, we are called to walk in love, awareness, and accountability within our own communities.



 

And as Dr. Reid often says, when something is public, it becomes open to public opinion.




That doesn’t mean every opinion is right or righteous.
It doesn’t mean every critique is fair.
But it does mean backlash is part of visibility.

And we should allow room for conversation.



And let’s be honest—we are all adults here. I believe we can handle the sight of a sexy dress without losing our composure or our theology. Who knows, maybe next we’ll see Dr. Jamal Bryant preaching in sweatpants.





This moment isn’t about shaming a woman. It’s about acknowledging the tension many of us live in daily—the space between faith and fun, modesty and expression, freedom and responsibility.




And maybe the real question isn’t whether the dress was right or wrong.




Maybe the question is:
Are we prepared for the conversations, practices, and thoughts we have around sex or sexuality? Why did our minds automatically go there?


Are we prepared for the consequences of how we choose to show up in public spaces—and are we extending the same grace we hope to receive?


Are we prepared for the conversations about us around how we choose to show up in public spaces?




Because if we’re honest, most of us have been Vashti at some point.
And many of us have also worn the dress or the not so good looking thing that sparked talk.

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