Synopses & Reviews
After losing herself too many times to the wrong man—after watching too many friends suffer from the lies and games of "mind wrecking" males—Tionna Tee Smalls started the "Girl, Get Your Mind Right" movement. Her goal is to help every woman find the right man—no more settling and no more nights alone. Tionna says it's time for you to stop blaming yourselves for your toxic love lives and take a deep, hard look at why you're attracting the wrong men in the first place.
Gathering together all the good advice that made her a star on VH1's What Chilli Wants, Tionna Tee Smalls sugar-coats nothing, pulls no punches, and tells women how it really is. Girl, Get Your Mind Right will show you the correct ways to deal with every man who worms his way into your heart—from the broke cheater all the way up to Mr. Right.
Synopsis
Tionna Tee Smalls, star of the VH1 reality show
What Chilli Wants, brings her straight up relationship expertise and no bull attitude to women everywhere in
Girl, Get Your Mind Right--offering tell-it-like-it-is advice your love life has been missing. The flip side of Steve Harvey's blockbuster bestseller
Act Like a Lady, Think Like a Man, Tionna's
Girl, Get Your Mind Right is the book that every woman needs.
Synopsis
Smalls, star of the number-one VH1 reality show "What Chilli Wants," brings her straight-up relationship expertise and no-bull attitude to a new book that every woman needs.
Synopsis
Tionna Tee Smalls, star of the VH1 reality show What Chilli Wants, brings her straight up relationship expertise and no bull attitude to women everywhere in Girl, Get Your Mind Right—offering tell-it-like-it-is advice your love life has been missing. The flip side of Steve Harveys blockbuster bestseller Act Like a Lady, Think Like a Man, Tionnas Girl, Get Your Mind Right is the book that every woman needs.
About the Author
Tionna Tee Smalls serves as Rozonda "Chilli" Thomas's guide to finding true love on the hit VH1 series What Chilli Wants. Tionna's career as a relationship expert began with a self-published book that she sent to the website Gawker in hopes that they would cover it. Instead, they hired her as their relationship columnist.