Mind of MalakaEssaysBooksPodcastsAboutContact
Mind of Malaka
Discover
  • Essays
  • Books
  • Podcasts
  • About
  • Contact
Essay Categories
  • Motherhood
  • Marriage
  • Madness
  • Musings
  • Photo Essay Friday
  • RHKOA
  • Say what??
  • The South African Series
  • Uncategorized
  • GH2013

© Copyright - Malaka Grant, 2025.   All Rights Reserved.   Privacy Policy & GDPR

See your future ahead of you

Latest Essays

Categories:  MotherhoodMarriageMadnessMusingsPhoto Essay FridayRHKOASay what??The South African SeriesUncategorizedGH2013
Motherhood

For My Kids: Develop Your Own Safe Space By Interrogating the Truth

4 comments

‘Bullying’ isn’t just a 21st century buzzword that is strewn about like bunting at a state fair – it’s a real social scourge that affects millions of children worldwide, every day. Bullying has measurable and serious consequences, including diminished self-esteem, depression and suicide. It’s not something any one of us should take lightly, either as […]

Read more
The South African Series

My Books Are Available on TakeALot.Com, And That’s A Big Deal

2 comments

Everyone thinks self-publishing – or any independent creative work – is sexy. There’s this aura of grittiness, the allure of the idea of that you can grind your way to the top, the crowning achievement being that indelible interview on Ellen or Access Hollywood. It’s not just spectators who harbor this delusion; we artists and […]

Read more
Marriage

Prince Harry Ran Through A Field of Laoghaires to Find His ‘Meghan Donn’

0 comments

Mo nighean donn (Gaelic). Translation: My brown haired lass You’d have to be a fan of the series ‘Outlander’ to truly appreciate what I’ve done with the title of this post. And the answer to your unasked question is, yes. Yes, I’m right proud of myself. It’s a braw thing I’ve done there. So! Prince […]

Read more
Madness

Dear White People: Telling Black People That They Are ‘Not Like Other Black People’ Is Not a Compliment.

3 comments

I suppose I should’ve been ready for it. It was a Monday afternoon, after all. These sorts of things only happen during queer times. Like when the 13th of the month falls on a Friday, when the moon is full during its lunar cycle, and – of course – Mondays. I was so relieved that […]

Read more
Marriage

There Are Days When I Still Mourn the Loss of My Maiden Name

2 comments

Do you remember your early middle school crushes? Did you ever play that game when you wrote your name and substituted your surname for that of the class prefect you only dared to admire from afar, fantasizing about the day you would be wed? I did. And it was fun…until it actually mattered. For 27 […]

Read more
Motherhood

I’m Terrified That My Daughters Will Identify With a Hashtag like #MeToo One Day

0 comments

I’ve been sitting on this post for a week or better. The subject matter is one that people like myself – empaths – would much rather leave to our darkest imaginations than speak about, the risk being that the undesired event may come to pass. But if you’ve lived a day over 20, you know […]

Read more
GH2013

Lecherous Lecturers: Preparing Your Student For the Lion’s Den

1 comments

It’s not the kind of message I was expecting to receive to early in the morning, particularly not from the individual in question. He is a casual (and one of my more pleasant) acquaintances on social media. Our conversation has run the gamut from history, to music, to women’s issues…but never this. “A friend of […]

Read more
Marriage

When Marriage Becomes Idolatry

2 comments

Idolatry: extreme admiration, love, or reverence for something or someone. A fetishism.    It’s a widely held belief that the wedding industry is the only viable, locally sustained industry in the Ghana. Oil and gas is still somewhat nascent and has yet to yield all of the promised gains that were dangled in front of […]

Read more
Marriage

Patriarchal Princesses Don’t Bother Me. Here’s Why.

10 comments

In just four short months I will turn 40. I mention the coming of this milestone with pride and eagerly await its coming. Like 16 and 25, 40 is a one of those benchmark birthdays that heralds a shift in a woman’s life. For one thing, I will have achieved authentic ‘Auntie’ status owing to […]

Read more
GH2013

I Support Africa’s Supreme Court Judges’ Right to Wear Those Ridiculous Robes

0 comments

There was an article making the rounds on social media last week querying why African judges still wear wigs 50 years after the end of colonization. The question remains a post-colonial conundrum: What is so appealing about the trappings of a judicial system that robbed an entire continent of its freedoms and imposed foreign laws […]

Read more
Say what??

#PepperDemMinistries: An Official Statement

0 comments

Are you listening to the Super Morning Show of Joy FM? Perhaps you would like to know more about PDM. Here is their official statement! This is our official statement on who we are, what we are about, and where we would like to go with the Ministry. Who are we? These past two weeks […]

Read more
Madness

‘De Ting Go Skrrrr Ka’ Guy is a Ghanaian. Here Are Some of the Clues I Purposely Ignored.

2 comments

De ting go skkrrrrr ka has made its way into and took over the zeitgeist of September 2017. Very few pop culture moments have staying power beyond 3 weeks, and as the interest in this one begins to wane, we give thanks to the BBC, Charley with the blue eyes, MC Quakez and Shakez and […]

Read more
Musings

#PepperDemMinistries is the Movement We Need For This Hour

0 comments

In the movie Selma, there is a scene during which the members of the SCLC couldn’t agree on which obstacle to voting rights (and all civil rights, by extension) to tackle first. They deliberated hotly among themselves. “It has to be the poll tax,” said one. “No. It’s education,” said another, citing the literacy tests […]

Read more
Madness

There Are No ‘Bro Code’ Discounts in Entrepreneurial Families

2 comments

My husband and I are entrepreneurs. He writes code for a living and I sell any and everything. I’m not saying that to be funny. From essential oils to smutty books (and I think I just came up with an idea for a combo pack!), I am a basically an e-market queen. It is just […]

Read more
Musings

How Pilferage On An African Airline Inspired A New Accessory

2 comments

I have the worst luck flying into OR Tambo Airport. Since I began flying to South Africa in 2011, I have had my bags broken into 100% of the time. There is no margin of error with regard to that statistic. No matter what flight/airline I’ve traveled on – be it Delta Airlines, or Virgin […]

Read more
Musings

The Story of Your Beloved Confederacy as Told on the Bodies of Black Folk

0 comments

Many years ago, I had the honor of hearing Leymah Gbowee speak in Accra as she gave an introduction to the film ‘Pray The Devil Back to Hell.’ The documentary covers chronicles social unrest in the West African Republic of Liberia, where civil war has torn the nation apart and left hundreds of thousands dead […]

Read more
Musings

Can We Pause And Think Critically About Lakewood? Please?

2 comments

I know we don’t like Joel Osteen. I know! We hate the way his face breaks into that peculiar goofy half smirk, like he’s always primed to play a game of peek-a-boo with his audience. We hate that curly shag he sports just above the nape of his neck. We hate that there is always […]

Read more
Musings

Race and Slavery: A Crash Course for Journalists Who Refuse to Read

3 comments

The idea that “Africans sold each other” into slavery is not a new one, but it is one that is generally advanced by the poorly educated or those wishing to shift the bulk of the blame from European participation and place it on the shoulders of the Mythical African. Mythical because before a person born […]

Read more
Madness

How Do Our Vets Feel About Seeing Nazi’s Thrive on American Soil?

3 comments

My grandfather (may he party in eternal peace) served in the United States army for 3 years. He was stationed at an air force base in Georgia where he worked as a cook and received distinction for his prowess as a thespian. (Now I know where I get my flair for the dramatic from.) He […]

Read more
Musings

Patriarchy Killed Okonkwo

4 comments

Until this weekend, I was among the few Ghanaians who had never read Chuninua Achebe’s critically acclaimed work, Things Fall Apart. I was familiar enough with the title and the name of the main character – Okonkwo – but much like those village-bound JSS students who made flatulent claims about going abroad for the long […]

Read more
GH2013

Edem Kumodzi is the Hero We All Need

2 comments

If you’ve ever been stopped by a member of the traffic division of Ghana’s police force, you know you’re in for a loss. You will lose precious time and you will likely lose more than a few cedis in the wake of the encounter. The police delight in harassing particular motorists; taxi drivers, women and […]

Read more
  Previous Posts Next Posts