Presents feature exclusive
“How to Make a Choice Intuition or Reason?” Newsletter.
With Owusuaa Gyimah-Addo
OWUSUAA Magazine
The Quest | She Represents the Pursuit of Limitless Potential : ACCEPTED
OWM: The Owusuaa Newsletter Magazine
Spotlight: Nana Owusuaa — African Stream
Feature Focus: Wearing the Change : The Symmetry Mindset.
Subtitle: ONLINE DIGITAL HEALTH & LIFESTYLE MAGAZINE
Issue No: 9 Barcode & ISBN placeholder (retain original visual) Cover Model wears SYMMETRY Redefining Fitness & Confidence.
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In This Issue:
🔹 This week, we help you:
Unlock the mindset behind powerful decisions Tune into your inner voice without ignoring strategy
Make aligned choices that drive results-and peace. Because the next level of your life won’t be built on hesitation or outdated thinking. It will be built on self-awareness, courage, and a new way of choosing.
So, once again…
“Who are you-and what will you choose?
🔹 Tips & Tricks.: Intuition or Reason? How to Make Aligned Choices
1. Pause Before You Decide
Don’t rush. The biggest breakthroughs often come in stillness. Take a moment to breathe and ask: “What’s really driving this decision—fear or purpose?”
2. Check Your Alignment, Not Just Logic
Reason gives structure, but intuition brings soul. Ask:
- Does this feel right in my spirit?
- Does it align with my values, not just my goals?
3. Use the 3C Filter: Courage, Clarity, Compassion
Before deciding, run it through this:
- Courage: Am I playing small or being brave?
- Clarity: Is this clear or chaotic?
- Compassion: Will this decision honor others and myself?
4. Journal the Pros + Pray on the Path
Write down both the practical pros/cons and what your heart is whispering. Then pray, meditate, or reflect spiritually on it. Let faith lead your final step.
5. Trust the Tension Between Both
Great decisions don’t always feel easy. Sometimes, reason says “wait,” but intuition says “move.” That tension? It’s the space where wisdom is born. Listen deeply.
6. Ask the Future You
Imagine your highest, most purpose-driven self five years from now.
Ask her: “What would you choose at this moment?”
Then act from her, not from your fear.
7. Let Peace Be the Final Answer
Whether it’s intuitive or rational—if the final choice gives you peace (even if it scares you)—it’s probably right.
Peace is confirmation. Confusion is caution.
Send us your thoughts: hello@owusuaamagazine.com
OWUSUAA Magazine
The Quest | She Represents the Pursuit of Limitless Potential
ACCEPTED
FEATURE EXCLUSIVE
How to Make a Choice
Intuition or Reason?
Wearing the Change
The Symmetry Mindset
ONLINE DIGITAL HEALTH & LIFESTYLE MAGAZINE
📍 Issue No: 9 | Barcode & ISBN placeholder (retain original visual)
Cover Model wears SYMMETRY — Redefining Fitness & Confidence

WHO ARE YOU?
This is more than a question. It’s a call to return to your truest self. A reminder that authenticity, alignment, and the courage to evolve are not optional—they’re essential.
Be who you are on the inside, no matter what society, business, the economy, or the market project onto you.
Because the most limiting force in our lives is not our circumstances.
It’s not the economy.
It’s not a competition.
It’s us—the outdated version of ourselves that we keep clinging to, even when we’ve outgrown it.
Every decision we make, every risk we take—or avoid—stems from our self-perception. And if that perception is built on past experiences or outdated strategies, we’re already behind.
Reinvention isn’t optional. It’s survival.
Everything around us is moving, 24 hours a day. It waits for no one. But it rewards those who evolve—first.
This isn’t about abandoning your core.
It’s about expanding it—refining it—until it becomes undeniable.
The most successful founders, brands, and businesses don’t pivot only when forced. They anticipate. They adapt. They lead the shift before it happens.
If the way you’re showing up in the market today looks the same as it did years ago, you’re already behind.
Your next level demands a new narrative. Reinvent the idea of yourself.
Because the world doesn’t follow those who wait to be defined. It follows those who define themselves—first. So… who are you?

Owusuaa Gyimah-Addo:
WHO ARE YOU?
This isn’t just a question.
It’s a mirror—a challenge to strip away the projections placed on us by society, markets, competition, and even success itself.
Because the greatest limitation we face is rarely the world outside—It’s the version of ourselves we’ve outgrown but refuse to release.
About Nana Owusuaa Gyimah-Addo
A Journey of Faith, Courage, Compassion, Wisdom, and Vision
Nana Owusuaa Gyimah-Addo—also known as Gwen Addo—is a trailblazer who transitioned from the structured world of banking into the dynamic realm of entrepreneurship, becoming a transformative figure in the African hair and beauty industry.
Her story is one of resilience, vision, and a relentless drive to empower others.
Early Life and Education
Growing up in Laterbiokoshie surrounded by her brothers, Gwen embraced her unique identity—a self-described tomboy who eventually fell in love with all things women. This balance of strength and femininity would later become central to her life’s mission.
Her entrepreneurial spirit sparked early when she began selling handmade items to classmates in primary school.
After completing primary education at New Hope School, she continued to Saint Monica’s Secondary School in Mampong, where boarding life taught her resilience and independence. Gwen later graduated from Akosombo International School, then earned her first degree from the University of Ghana, Legon.
Her academic journey culminated in an Executive MBA from the China Europe International Business School (CEIBS)—equipping her with the tools to build an empire with purpose.
A Life Built on Belief
“Every decision, every risk, every turning point stems from who I believe I am. And if that belief is not built on outdated narratives, old fears, or expired strategies—then I am always ahead.” — Owusuaa
Through her entrepreneurial journey, Owusuaa discovered that qualities like confidence, wisdom, compassion, and courage are inherent in all life. Her efforts deepened her belief that all people can manifest these traits—and transform their own lives.

“In the early days of Hair Senta, my Christian faith and belief in inner transformation—or what is call “human revolution”—became the foundation of my message”:
Everyone can change their destiny for the better.
This truth resonated powerfully across Ghana and Africa—especially among people suffering from poverty, illness, and the daily challenges of hardship.
My unshakable confidence in faith-based philosophy, combined with my ability to translate biblical wisdom into practical life lessons, re-ignited hope and courage in countless lives.
A Call to Our Leaders
We must remember our uncompromising stance against poverty and systemic misery—what Owusuaa calls an absolute evil that threatens people’s inalienable right to life.
“I urge our leaders to commit to the abolition of poverty and hopelessness—so we can bring peace, security, and prosperity to our land. It starts with our own decisions and perceptions.” — Owusuaa
The Truth? Reinvention is Not Optional. It’s survival.
The world is moving—constantly.
And only those who evolve first get rewarded.
So I ask again:
Who are we becoming?
The Quest: Intuition or Reason? How to Make a Choice
This week’s edition is more than just a read—
It’s a revolution in mindset and decision-making for leaders, believers, and changemakers across the globe.
In this Special Feature, Nana Owusuaa Gyimah-Addo—Leadership & Mindset Coach, Entrepreneur, and unapologetic purpose-driven trailblazer—dives into one of the most timeless dilemmas we all face:
- Do you follow your gut, or trust your logic?
- How do successful women make hard calls in leadership, business, and life?
- Can faith, intuition, and strategy truly coexist?

The Quest: Intuition or Reason? How do you Make a Choice
Life constantly presents us with choices — some trivial, others transformative. In these pivotal moments, we often find ourselves standing at a psychological crossroads, torn between two inner voices: intuition and reason. But which should we trust? And how do we decide?
The Voice of Intuition
Intuition is fast, automatic, and deeply personal. It’s the gut feeling you get when something just feels right or wrong — even if you can’t explain why. Often described as a “knowing without knowing,” intuition draws from subconscious experiences, patterns, and emotions that we may not consciously process.
It’s what tells an artist where to place the next brushstroke, what guides a firefighter through a burning building when seconds count, and what prompts a person to walk away from a deal that seemed perfect on paper.
But intuition can also be biased. It’s shaped by personal history, emotions, and cultural conditioning. It’s quick — but not always correct.
The Logic of Reason
Reason, in contrast, is deliberate and analytical. It weighs options, considers outcomes, and relies on evidence and structured thought. When you’re making a budget, writing a business plan, or choosing a school, reason is your most reliable tool.
It helps us avoid impulsive decisions, see long-term consequences, and identify blind spots in our thinking. But reason has its limits, too. It can become paralyzing when we overanalyze, and it can fail to account for the emotional and intuitive dimensions of human experience.
So, How Do You Make a Choice?
The answer is rarely either/or. The most powerful decisions often come from a dialogue between intuition and reason.
- Start with intuition: What is your first, unfiltered feeling? Don’t ignore it — it’s information.
- Follow with reason: Ask why you feel that way. What evidence supports or challenges your gut instinct?
- Balance the two: For complex decisions, let reason structure your thinking, but let intuition guide your values and vision.
The Integration Point
Some of the wisest leaders, creatives, and thinkers describe their process as reasoned intuition — trusting the gut, but only after giving the brain its say. Over time, as experience grows, reason and intuition begin to blend into a kind of inner wisdom.
In the end, the quest is not to choose between intuition or reason, but to learn when and how to trust each — and when they disagree, to pause and listen more deeply.
This isn’t just theory—it’s transformation
Your choices shape your destiny.
And true power comes when you harness both your inner wisdom and clear reasoning—not as opposites, but as allies.

You don’t have to choose one over the other.
You have to know how to choose.
Absolutely — Africa’s colonial legacy is a powerful, real-world example of the tension between intuition and reason, especially in how the continent has historically been guided (or coerced) into decisions that served foreign interests, not its own.
Here’s how this can be woven into your theme, with a clear, impactful example:
The Quest: Intuition or Reason? How Africa’s Colonial Legacy Shapes Its Choices
Africa’s story of colonization is more than a tale of conquest — it is also a struggle between externally imposed reason and a suppressed internal intuition.
For decades, during and after colonial rule, African nations have exported their wealth — raw agricultural products like cocoa, coffee, and cotton; mineral resources like gold, copper, and oil — primarily to their former colonial masters. These resources, taken from African soil, were refined, processed, and manufactured abroad, only to be sold back to African countries at far higher prices.
A Historical Example: The Case of Cocoa in Ghana
Ghana is one of the world’s top cocoa producers. For over a century, Ghanaian farmers have grown cocoa, yet the country processes less than 10% of its beans locally. Instead, raw cocoa is exported to Europe, where it becomes Swiss chocolate, Belgian truffles, or French luxury brands — creating jobs, wealth, and industrial growth outside of Africa.

Why has Ghana — and so many African nations — continued this pattern?
- Colonial economic systems, rationalized as “efficient,” were designed to extract, not to build. The infrastructure was built to move goods to ports, not to connect local industries.
- Post-independence leadership, influenced by foreign policies and economic models, often followed those same extractive logic patterns.
- Reason said: “Export raw goods, earn foreign currency, attract investment.”
- But Intuition — and history — said: “We’re giving away our power. We should be building the factories here.”
Yet for years, that deeper voice — the one calling for local manufacturing, for value addition, for African-owned industries — was ignored, underfunded, or dismissed as idealistic.
What’s Changing Now?
Today, a shift is underway. Countries like Rwanda, Ethiopia, and Ghana are slowly starting to challenge this model. Local cocoa processing plants are emerging. The African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) is opening doors for intra-African manufacturing and trade.
This shift is an act of reclaiming intuitive sovereignty: the sense that Africa’s future should be built not just on numbers and trade models, but on a deep, historical knowing — that true freedom means owning the process, not just the land.
Bringing It Back to the Individual
Just as Africa struggles between intuition and reason — between following old systems or building new ones — so too do individuals. Whether you’re choosing a career, a partner, or a purpose, the key isn’t to reject reason or intuition, but to align them toward a vision you truly believe in.
“Africa must industrialize. We must process what we produce. The world has reasoned for us long enough — now it’s time to listen to our own wisdom.”
This Week, We Help You:
- Unlock the mindset behind powerful decisions
- Tune into your inner voice without ignoring strategy
- Make aligned choices that deliver results—and peace
Because your next level won’t be built on hesitation or outdated thinking.
It will be built on self-awareness, courage, and a new way of choosing.
So once again, I ask:
Who are you—and what will you choose?
Dialogue Begins:


Berla Mundi (Host):
Good day, beautiful people across the world, and welcome to a special edition of our thought-provoking leadership series. I’m your host, Berla Mundi, a passionate storyteller, media personality, and advocate for women’s empowerment. Today, we are opening the pages of wisdom, faith, and transformation with a very special guest.
Now, I want you to pause for a moment and take in this question:
“How to Make a Choice—Intuition or Reason?”
It’s not just a topic. It’s a quest.
It’s a question that touches the heart of every decision we make, from boardrooms to bedrooms, from ministry to marketplace.
And today, joining me in this deeply personal and purposeful conversation is a woman who doesn’t just ask the question—she lives the answer.
She’s a beacon of transformation.
She’s a businesswoman, a spiritual force, a mindset coach, and a mother to movements across Ghana and beyond.
Please help me welcome the powerhouse herself—Nana Owusuaa Gyimah-Addo, also known as Gwen Addo. Welcome, Nana Owusuaa, to this Dialogue. The world is listening.
Your presence represents The Quest. You are the living pursuit of limitless potential.
You absolutely win—because you’ve imprinted a clear, fearless purpose in your heart that defeats hesitation and silences doubt.
You’ve moved mountains. You’ve helped people destroy fear, dispel sadness, and ignite hope. You’ve shown us how human revolution is possible—through your leadership, your message, and even your book, “Direction”—the script of your life and the compass of many others.
You embody the truth that we are all connected. That’s why you employ young people, support other entrepreneurs, and open doors for others—because you understand that we are all children of God. You choose to rise—and pull others with you.
So tell us, Nana Owusuaa…
Our global readers and listeners want to know:
What does it really mean to make a choice from intuition or reason?

Nana Owusuaa Gyimah-Addo:
Thank you so much, Berla. What a warm, generous, and thoughtful welcome.
And to everyone reading and listening across the globe—thank you. This is more than a conversation—it’s a moment of truth for many of us.
Let me begin by saying:
“Every decision, every risk, every turning point in my life—has come down to one thing: who I believe I am.”
And if that belief is not based on outdated fears, expired strategies, or limited narratives—then I am always ahead. When I look back at my journey—from a structured career in banking to building one of Africa’s most trusted hair and beauty brands, Hair Senta—I see that every bold step was guided by a delicate dance between intuition and reason.
Intuition is the whisper of your soul.
The reason is the architecture of your mind.
You need both to build a future that is both wise and true.
I’ve made business decisions that didn’t make sense to others—but they made peace in my spirit.
And I’ve made strategic moves grounded in logic that opened unimaginable doors.
The key is this:
“You don’t have to choose one over the other. You have to know how to choose.”
That’s why I wrote “Direction.”
That book was my way of putting language to the process—how I, as a Christian, as a woman, as a leader—make choices through divine wisdom and practical discernment.
I’ve come to believe this deeply:
- We are connected to the universe.
- We are here to evolve.
- We are designed to lead.
And that’s why I’ve made it a mission to empower others—to awaken them to the greatness that’s already inside them.
When you hire people, invest in entrepreneurs, or mentor a soul, you’re not just supporting a dream.
You are witnessing God’s potential multiplied. And when you have that kind of conviction, you can face any weakness—and still win.

Berla Mundi:
Powerful! That alone is a masterclass in purpose and presence. Nana Owusuaa, you’ve touched on something so vital here: the relationship between faith, clarity, and courage.
Now, let’s dive deeper into this week’s feature article in OWUSUAA WEEKLY MAGAZINE, where you explore this in beautiful depth.
You titled it:
“How to Make a Choice: Intuition or Reason?”
The Quest | She Represents the Pursuit of Limitless Potential: ACCEPTED
Can you walk us through the framework you offered in the magazine? For the benefit of our listeners, take us point-by-point.

Nana Owusuaa Gyimah-Addo:
Absolutely, Berla. This feature isn’t just an article—it’s a blueprint for decision-making in modern leadership and life. Let me break it down for our audience:
This week, we help you:
- Unlock the mindset behind powerful decisions
- Tune into your inner voice without ignoring strategy
- Make aligned choices that deliver results and peace
Here are the key points from the piece:
1. Pause Before You Decide
Don’t rush. The greatest wisdom often arrives in stillness. Ask yourself:
“Is this fear or purpose driving my choice?”
2. Check Your Alignment, Not Just Logic
Ask:
- Does this feel right in my spirit?
- Does this align with my values, not just my goals?
3. Use the 3C Filter
Before you decide, ask:
- Courage – Am I shrinking or standing tall?
- Clarity – Is this decision clear or chaotic?
- Compassion – Does this honor others and myself?
4. Journal the Pros + Pray on the Path
Write the logic. Listen to the soul. Then pray. Let faith seal the deal.
5. Trust the Tension Between Both
That tension between logic and intuition? That’s where wisdom is born. Don’t escape it—engage it.
6. Ask the Future You
Visualize your future self. Five years from now. What would she choose?
Then act from her, not from your fear.
7. Let Peace Be the Final Answer
If peace is present, even when you’re nervous—it’s probably right.
Confusion is caution. Peace is confirmation.

Berla Mundi:
That is rich and relatable, Owusuaa. You make the concept of decision-making feel sacred. Like a leadership devotion. And to our audience: take these tools with you. Use them. Live them. So once more, as Nana Owusuaa challenges us: Who are you? And what will you choose? his has been your exclusive Dialogue. Stay tuned for more interviews that elevate the mind, stir the heart, and ignite your leadership.
Dialogue Continues:

Berla Mundi:
Nana Owusuaa, earlier you made a powerful call—one that stopped me in my tracks.
You said we must remember our uncompromising stance against poverty and systemic misery, calling them an absolute evil that threatens people’s inalienable right to life. That’s a bold statement, and one many shy away from. But you confront it with unflinching clarity.
Please, share more with us—what do you want our leaders, our youth, our future thinkers to understand?

Nana Owusuaa Gyimah-Addo:
Thank you, Berla. And thank you for holding space for this truth. Because it matters—urgently.
“I urge our leaders to commit to the abolition of poverty and hopelessness—so we can bring peace, security, and prosperity to our land. It starts with our own decisions and perceptions.”
When poverty becomes normalized, when hopelessness is accepted as cultural, when survival replaces vision—we have already lost too much. The leadership we need now—across every field—must be unapologetically human.
We need leaders who understand that dignity is not earned through wealth. It is the birthright of every Ghanaian, every African, every human being.
We cannot build a peaceful, secure, and thriving nation while tolerating systems that profit off human suffering.
And the truth is—change won’t only come from politics. It begins inside you and me. It starts with the decisions we make each day, in business, in homes, in classrooms, and on platforms like this one.

Berla Mundi:
Whew! That’s deeply felt.
It brings us right back to the essence of this week’s OWUSUAA Magazine edition and our feature topic:
“The Quest: Intuition or Reason? How to Make a Choice.”
Because, like you’ve said—every national shift begins with personal choice. This isn’t just an article—it’s a revolution in mindset and decision-making for leaders, believers, and change makers across the globe.
And you, Nana Owusuaa—Leadership Coach, Entrepreneur, and purpose-driven trailblazer—you take us right into one of life’s most timeless dilemmas.
Let’s break it down for our audience once more:
- Do you follow your gut—or trust your logic?
- How do successful women make hard calls in leadership, business, and life?
- Can faith, intuition, and strategy truly coexist?

Nana Owusuaa Gyimah-Addo:
Yes, Berla. And let me say this to everyone watching or reading today:
You don’t have to choose one over the other. You have to learn how to choose from your center.
For years, I was trained to lean toward reason. I had degrees. I worked in structured environments. I understood data, performance, and planning.
But I also knew that God speaks in silence. That intuition is spiritual intelligence. So, over time, I began to trust both—my mind and my spirit. And that’s what I now teach others, especially women in leadership:
You are not weak because you feel.
You are powerful because you discern.
The choices I’ve made—from launching a business to mentoring other entrepreneurs—weren’t always logical. Some didn’t make sense on paper. But they felt aligned with purpose..That’s where intuition and reason meet: in the space where faith gives courage to strategy, and wisdom gives wings to data.

Berla Mundi:
That’s a whole message right there! And for our readers in this week’s issue, I want to remind you:
This isn’t just theory—it’s transformation.
Nana Owusuaa isn’t just telling us what she’s learned—she’s lived it. She’s taken the hardest calls—stepped away from safety—and built a legacy of faith-fueled impact.
Let’s remember what you shared earlier, Owusuaa:
“The truth? Reinvention is not optional. It’s survival.
The world is moving constantly. And only those who evolve first get rewarded.” So let me ask you—once again:
Who are we becoming?
Because if we are still choosing from fear, doubt, outdated beliefs—then we’re delaying the greatness within us.

Nana Owusuaa Gyimah-Addo:
Exactly, Berla. And I want to leave every listener with this:
You were not born to play small.
You were not created to repeat the past.
You were designed for divine expansion.
This world will change—not because of a few loud voices, but because of quiet convictions lived out with power.
So I ask you:
Who are you? And what will you choose—Intuition or Reason? When both work together, that’s when destiny moves.

Berla Mundi:
That is rich and relatable, Owusuaa. You make the concept of decision-making feel sacred. Like a leadership devotion.
And to our audience: take these tools with you. Use them. Live them. So once more, as Nana Owusuaa challenges us:
Who are you? And what will you choose?
This has been your exclusive Dialogue. Stay tuned for more interviews that elevate the mind, stir the heart, and ignite your leadership.
Berla-Mundi :
Nana Owusuaa Gyimah-Addo, now weaving in the “The Quest – Intuition or Reason?” narrative alongside Symmetry, Ghanaian entrepreneurship, and the power of self-perception through fashion, fitness, and fearless choice-making.
Dialogue Continues

Berla Mundi:
Nana Owusuaa, you are the living embodiment of The Quest—this ongoing journey of choosing between Intuition or Reason. And honestly, it’s not just your words that speak volumes—it’s how you show up.
From leadership to fashion to fitness—you’re not just talking about change. You’re wearing the change. Let’s talk about that mindset. Right now, you’re repping the Ghanaian fitness brand Symmetry, and I know that’s not a coincidence.
You’ve said before: “Wearing Ghana, promoting Ghana, and believing in Ghanaian excellence is a mindset—and it’s a choice I make daily.” That’s powerful. Why is it so important to wear the change you want to see?

Nana Owusuaa Gyimah-Addo:
Thank you, Berla—and you’re absolutely right.
This isn’t just fabric. This is philosophy.
When I wear Symmetry, I’m not just supporting a local brand—I’m telling my body, my mind, and my community: Ghana is enough. We have creativity. We have innovation. We have the spirit. What we need now is conviction.
Wearing Ghanaian-made activewear is a form of self-belief.
It says, “I trust my people. I trust our story. I trust our future.”
So whether I’m stepping into a boardroom, a gym, or a photoshoot, my outfit reflects my decision to show up fully—anchored in both intention and intuition.

Berla Mundi:
And let’s be honest—you look fierce doing it! 🔥
But more than that, I think what resonates deeply with our readers and viewers is how you link appearance to alignment.
You once said: “How you dress can reflect your thinking” !
That really stayed with me. Because so often, we talk ourselves out of spaces—like fitness, entrepreneurship, or leadership—because we don’t “see” ourselves there.
We say:
“Gym life isn’t for women like me.”
“Business isn’t my thing.”
“Maybe I’m just meant to survive, not succeed.”
What would you say to the woman standing on the edge of her next level—but unsure which voice to trust?

Nana Owusuaa Gyimah-Addo:
I would say this:
The battlefield is never outside—it’s in your own head.
Every person is born with infinite potential—I believe that with my whole heart. But between what we dream and what we achieve lies this invisible war of choices.
And the loudest voice is often not truth—it’s conditioning. We’ve internalized limitations. We’ve agreed silently with ideas like:
“Success is for others.”
“This is too big for me.”
“What if I fail?”
But here’s the truth: You don’t have to be fearless—you just have to be faithful to your calling. That’s what intuition does—it whispers your truest self.
Reason has its place—it protects you, it structures you—but it must never paralyze you.
So when I make decisions—whether in launching Hair Senta, scaling HIBS Africa, mentoring entrepreneurs, or simply choosing Symmetry over a global brand—I’m choosing with alignment. Not fear. Not doubt. Just faith in my assignment.

Berla-Mundi:
You just gave us a full sermon in one sitting! 🙌🏽 Let me just repeat this for everyone tuning in:
“You don’t have to be fearless—you just have to be faithful to your calling.”
This is The Quest in real time.
You don’t need to have all the answers.
You don’t need to wait until it’s perfect.
You just need to move—with clarity, with courage, with compassion.
And let’s be clear—you are a movement, Owusuaa.
From enterprise to empowerment, you’re building not just businesses, but belief. Helping Ghanaians create, own, and scale their dreams—and reminding us that we don’t have to look outside for greatness. It’s already here. In us. Around us. Made by us.

Nana Owusuaa Gyimah-Addo:
Exactly, Berla-Mundi.
We can build globally—but source locally.
We can compete internationally—but think authentically.
We don’t need to wait for validation—we need to be the validation.
So to anyone watching, reading, listening:
Whether it’s launching your brand, entering the gym, writing the book, or wearing that bold outfit—
Pause. Ask:
“Is this fear… or wisdom?”
“Intuition… or limitation?”
And then choose. Boldly. Bravely. Beautifully.

Berla Mundi:
Whew. Let me catch my breath.
Because if that didn’t awaken something in you—I don’t know what will. Nana Owusuaa, thank you.
For wearing the truth, living the truth, and reminding us that the future belongs to those who choose themselves first.
And to all our readers out there—
What will you choose?
Intuition or Reason? Fear or Freedom? Survival or Reinvention? The answer that leads to growth often whispers first from within. Let that be your guide. Thank you.
