Actress Nana Ama Mcbrown of Kumawood recalled how her inability to have children used to cause her to cry.
She claimed that whenever she thought about that, it used to be a trigger for her, causing her to sob profusely and wish for the best for herself.
In an interview with Berla Mundio on TV3, Nana Ama Mcbrown disclosed that having her first child, which she delivered successfully, was everything she had been searching for and had kept her from crying.
“It was all I ever wanted,. I used to cry a lot about my inability to have a baby. When I did, I stopped worrying and started to feel very fulfilled.
The 45-year-old presenter responded to all the haters by saying she doesn’t listen to them. She is instead occupied with her job, her family, and her husband.
“Now all that I worry about is my child, my work, and my husband.” “I have all that now, and I do not worry about what people have to say about me,” she said.
Taking you back to this moment when the Empress, Nana Ama McBrown said, ever since she gave birth she has stopped crying because she has every thing she ever wanted.#TheDayShow pic.twitter.com/w87j5wAgoN
— #TV3GH (@tv3_ghana) May 2, 2023
According to the ratings, Nana Ama Mcbrown’s debut program on Onua TV last week was deemed to be very successful. Nana Ama claimed that her journey is a living example of the proverb “from grass to grace” when she looks back and considers her lack of a higher education and how far she has come.
Empress McBrown is one name that is still fresh in everyone’s mind in Ghana since Sunday night.
On Sunday, April 30, 2021, Ghanaian actress and television personality Empress Nana Ama McBrown took over social media trends as the premiere of her new show on Onua TV.
Tens of thousands of live streams were watched during the first episode of the lifestyle and entertainment show on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, TikTok, and YouTube.
The debut show was given a fitting introduction thanks to the revitalizing new set, an enthralled studio audience, unexpected guests, and a rapturous crowd gathered outside Media General Premises.