After writer Sonhara Eastman married her husband, the questions began to roll in. Friends and family wanted to know when they were planning on having a baby. Why hadn’t they brought a new member into their family yet? Didn't they want to?
What Eastman couldn’t bring herself to tell them was that she and her husband did want child, and badly -- but she was struggling to conceive. In the process of trying to come to terms with the emotional toll her fertility challenges were taking on her, she began writing Black Girl’s Guide to Fertility, the web series she debuted last week on YouTube.
The series follows former romance novelist Ava (Raney Branch), who, after self-publishing a confessional about her attempts to get pregnant, finds herself at the center of a tumultuous cultural discussion.
Visit Tubefilter for more great stories.
What Eastman couldn’t bring herself to tell them was that she and her husband did want child, and badly -- but she was struggling to conceive. In the process of trying to come to terms with the emotional toll her fertility challenges were taking on her, she began writing Black Girl’s Guide to Fertility, the web series she debuted last week on YouTube.
The series follows former romance novelist Ava (Raney Branch), who, after self-publishing a confessional about her attempts to get pregnant, finds herself at the center of a tumultuous cultural discussion.
Visit Tubefilter for more great stories.
- 1/25/2019
- by James Loke Hale
- Tubefilter.com
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