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ABOUT ME

Professional Bio Of Lynette Love

Lynette Love’s ministry is to work with teens and women throughout the country. She was a teen mother who was determined to change the stereotypical prognosis of teen mothers. She has worked and volunteered in the Metropolitan Detroit area for over 20 years in human services. Lynette has strong experience in working with the human life cycle (prenatal to gerontology), early childhood, and adolescent and teen pregnancy programs. She has been a group facilitator for employees who experience stress, post traumatic stress, and career displacement.

Lynette held her first conference for her initiative “Helping Our Queens Keep Their Crowns” which promotes self-worth and positive self-image for teen girls in 1995, with Part II following in 1996. Now Lynette offers the conference as a life skills program and continues to design seminars of social concern.

As an Inspirational Speaker, Lynette has spoken nationally for various programs including:

  • Black Caucus Foundation Teen Pregnancy Program,
  • The Salvation Army Teen Pregnancy Program,
  • COTS (Coalition on Temporary Shelter),
  • SMOC (Single Mothers of Color on the Horizon),
  • Detroit Public Schools,
  • Women Preserving the History of Idlewild, (WHPOI)
  • Shekinah Tabernacle

Lynette is a Training Consultant for human services, education and faith-based agencies. Her training subjects include program design, substance abuse and domestic violence, residential and alternative education programs for youth, and transitional housing.

Her diverse talents lead her to work in entertainment. Lynette was the Event Director for Impact Detroit Magazine who interviewed such people as Erykah Badu. Lynette auditioned for “In Living Color” where people like Jim Carrey, Jennifer Lopez, and others got their start. She received a second callback but the show went off the air. Lynette went on to do stand-up comedy for local events.

She went on to Co-Host the live radio show “Expressions” with Forensic Psychologist Dr. Allen Cushingberry. Guest appearances and topics focused on people who called in relating life challenges and current events. She was a Guest-Host for radio talk shows “Feedback” with Theo Broughton and “In the Court of Public Opinion” with the infamous Attorney, former Judge and now Wayne County Prosecutor Kim Worthy discussing current events.

MiLaJa Records and Jazzii Entertainment & Production utilized her expertise as a Spirituality Coach for new artists and others in career advancement assisting in the transition from poverty to prosperity.

Lynette has added “Author” to her list of accomplishments. “May – December Winds (And Dorothy, You’re Not In Kansas Anymore)” is an inspirational self-help guide for teen girls and those who impact their lives. Lynette Love, in her quest to help empower young women, speaks candidly of her own experiences as a teen girl who became swept up in an adult world of sex, money, and drugs through her intimate relationships with adult males.

The life-skills workbook (of the same title) contains positive affirmations and life skills exercises that focus on self-image, goal setting and interpersonal relationships. It includes a section for educators to self-assess their professional capabilities when working with teens.

Lynette is pursuing her PhD in Human Services.

CONTACT US

For Information Call
888.808.1952
or
Email: contactinfo@lynettelove.org

Synopsis of May - December Winds book and workbook

May – December Winds (And Dorothy, You’re Not In Kansas Anymore) is an inspirational self-help guide for teen girls and those who impact their lives. The author, Lynette Love, invites you into a trend among teens that has long been a tolerated form of sexual abuse that society has romanticized. Lynette Love, in her quest to help empower young women, speaks candidly of her own experiences as a teen girl who became swept up in an adult world of sex, money, and drugs through her intimate relationships with with adult males. Through professional help as well as personal and spiritual growth, Love gives us warning signs of what makes a teen girl (May) vulnerable to these adult male predators (December). Her metaphor of the collision of these warm (May) and cold (December) winds as a tornado shows the emotional turmoil the young girl finds herself in. As a result, the destructive behaviors are symptomatic to teen issues of low self-worth, poor parent relationships, and lack of communication. She extends these adolescent challenges to show the association of society’s affect as a whole. Through her heart wrenching experiences, she manages to still have a positive outlook for a better tomorrow by sharing possible solutions on ‘how to heal’ the hurts within ourselves. Through self-love, Agape love, and positive communication, we can then shed the societal guilt of being negligent (of not protecting their future) by helping our youth to succeed.

The workbook contains positive affirmations and life skills exercises that focus on self-image, goal setting and interpersonal relationships. It includes a section for educators to self-assess their professional capabilities when working with teens.