“When you learn, teach, when you get, give.” ― Maya Angelou
Dr. Maya Angelou passed away peacefully on May 28th. She was a poet, memoirist, performer, educator, activist and mother. In 1982, when she took on a professorship at Wake Forest University, she knew she had come home. To her surprise she discovered she hadn’t become a writer who taught but was now a teacher who wrote. And teach she did. Many of us were introduced to her by Oprah Winfrey. Oprah took joy in sharing the life lessons she learned from her mentor. Today, many of those insights roll off my tongue. Whomever I quote them to invariably thinks I’m brilliant. Of course, I have to confess those wise words didn’t originate with me. I can only accept credit for being smart enough for taking Maya as my own.
“We are more alike than we are different” – Maya Angelou
I first read I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings when I was twenty. Maya was an artist who painted with words. It was the first time I had read such an honest, intimate account of sexual abuse and the struggles of being black and a woman. I was not black or sexually abused, but I am a woman and knew how it felt to be treated as “less than.” I had an immediate connection to the author. On the surface we were nothing a alike and yet she somehow knew my heart. I learned that as a young girl Maya sat in the balcony of a movie theater, reserved for blacks, waiting to grow up and become rich, beautiful and white. Thirty years later, I sat in a theater waiting to become that same woman. It never happened for either of us but watching Maya embrace her unsung beauty gave me, a white girl uncomfortable in her own skin, permission to do the same.
“Love builds up the broken wall and straightens the crooked path. Love keeps the stars in the firmament and imposes rhythm on the ocean tides. Each of us is created of it and I suspect each of us was created for it.” – Maya Angelou
As an adult, Maya boldly never edited who she was. I admired that but didn’t think it was possible for me to be that way until I read an interview with her in O Magazine. In it Oprah asked her where her confidence came from. I was expecting Dr. Angelou to say it came from being raised by her stable and loving grandmother. But no, she explained that it sprang from love. She didn’t mean love in a sentimental or romantic sense. What she was talking about was much bigger than that. She was referring to a state of being so large that it’s unconceivable. Knowing of all the strikes that had been against her, assured me that that kind of love is available to everyone. If bidden and allowed, it will hold anyone’s head high and move through them to fulfill their life’s purpose.
“If you have a song to sing, who are you not to open your mouth and sing to the world?” – Maya Angelou
I’m grateful Dr. Angelou had the presence of mind to document her life in books and interviews for all of humankind. Even in death, she will continue to teach. I smile when I think of how God brings greatness out of the most unlikely people. Thanks to Maya’s heeding the call, a six-foot-tall, black woman is no longer considered an unlikely candidate for anything. The concept for the above portrait came to me when I realized the word “angel” is in Dr. Angelou’s last name. I dressed her in the garb I imagined her ancestors wore and placed stargazer lilies in her arms. They’re fitting flowers for her to hold because they mean one who is “high-souled” or spiritually evolved. I find hope in knowing that she didn’t start out that way. From a turbulent childhood, she grew into a seeker of truth and then lived what she learned. She followed the yearnings of her soul and became part of a movement that raised our country’s awareness of social injustice. She was an earth-shaker and a mountain-mover. She left none of her gifts unused. And for that, dear Maya, we thank you.
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Text and images © Sue Shanahan. All rights reserved. www.sueshanahan.com
A nice tribute to her teachings.
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Thanks. It was hard for me to pare down such a big life. She was more than amazing.
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This is just a wonderful tribute to a force in so many lives,mine included. Thank you.
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Thanks, so much. Maya will not be soon forgotten.
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O.M.G. Sue you captured her beautifully… I’m amazed at YOUR insight of knowing without being… You go girl!!! I love you for who you are… God smile when He created you and said: “It was good”
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I think my “knowing” comes from (in Maya’s words) we being more alike than we are different.
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Beautiful, thoughtful tribute. Thank you for sharing.
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Thank you. She certainly change the world, didn’t she?
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Dear Sue, What a beautiful, loving tribute – and what a gift she was to our world. Thank you for sharing in such a special way! Blessings, Lois
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I had to do something for Maya. It was hard to funnel down someone who had such a huge life but I think she would be pleased with what I wrote.
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Sue, what a beautiful post and tribute. Maya Angelou was SO inspiring and her legacy will live on.
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Sue, I decided to reblog your post on Women Making Strides. 🙂
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Thank you, Susan. I’m honored.
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Thank you! You can tell I loved Maya too.
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Reblogged this on Women Making Strides and commented:
Loved this post by Sue Shanahan and wanted to share it with the readers of Women Making Strides. Maya was truly a leader in her own life (and that of others!) and she was a woman who used her talents to better the world.
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A beautiful tribute, and much to learn from these words…
robert
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Thank you, Robert. Maya is such a beautiful soul.
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