Your Guide Is Ready — The Nigerian Mother's MathsRescue Secret
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Your Guide Is Ready.

You stopped hoping things would get better on their own, and you actually moved. That matters more than you know.

A note from Seun

You made the right decision

I know what it took to get here. The lesson teachers who disappeared. The tears in the car. The nights at the table that ended in shouting instead of homework. You didn't need another person telling you to be patient. You needed a tool that actually works, and you went and got it.

Emeka's mother made the same decision. So did Chisom, and Ngozi, and Adaeze, and every other mother whose story you read on that page. Tonight, your child joins them.

Your download is ready below.

Step 1

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Everything In One File The Nigerian Mother's MathsRescue Secret Includes both bonuses: The Parent's AI Starter Cheat Sheet & The "My Child Hates Maths" Reversal Guide
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Step 2

Your first 24 hours

Tonight
Open the main guide. Read pages 4 to 9, the Homework Solver Prompt and the Topic Explainer Prompt. These two alone will carry you through most nights.
Before Bed
Open the Parent's AI Starter Cheat Sheet and set up ChatGPT, Grok, or Claude on your phone. Five minutes, no tech background needed. Have it ready so tomorrow there's no delay.
Tomorrow Morning
Ask your child which maths topic confuses them most, just one topic. Then open page 9 and run the Topic Explainer Prompt on it, exactly as written. Watch how differently they respond when the explanation is patient and never gets tired.

Don't try to read the whole guide cover to cover tonight. Start with one prompt, one topic, one small win. The Weekly Routine Planner on page 27 and the Topic Tracker on page 29 are there for once you're a few days in, not for tonight.

Before you go

One more thing

This guide will not fix everything by itself. What changes your child's maths is what you do with it, ten minutes a day, consistently, the way Emeka's mother did and Ngozi did. You already proved tonight that you're someone who follows through. That's the hardest part, and it's already behind you.

I'm proud of you for getting here. Go make tonight the last night your child dreads that textbook.

Seun