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Strong Female Role Models

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Flyaway

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Hi all,

Who do you look up to as a role model when you need a bit of strength or direction in life?

Someone from history I love is:
Georgia Lawshe Woods (movie-True Women)

I love that she challenged social norms that really were wrong! such as the way African Americans were treated. She was courageous, protective, loyal, a fighter. Most of all, I love her for doing what my mum failed to do- she protected her daughter Cherokee from being sexually assaulted.
 
In real life, my Nana - she trained as a dancer in the 20s, trained as a tailor in the 30s while looking after her dying mother, then trained as a cook. She cooked for schoolgirls and lords, and then went to work in a munitions factory during the war. Her first fiancé was killed during the war.

After she married my grandad, she had three children (and I'm pretty sure my Grandad had PTSD, from some of what my Nana told me about him, from his experiences during the war). She also took care of a couple of dozen foster children, and later saved my life - if it had been left to my mother I'd never have made it to toddling.

She had pneumonia four times, and a serious thyroid condition, but she took care of me my whole life until she died.


And in fiction, Anne of Green Gables and Buffy. :)
 
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So many to choose from!

Kathleen Hanna. Nina Simone. Pema Chodron. Louisa Pesel. All women about whom I've thought, "What would [insert name] do about [insert problem here]?

While the first three you may have heard of, the last one you may not know about. In short, she helped "shell shocked" soldiers during WWI through stitching and traveled all over the world, "despite" being female.
 
Rosa Parks, Emma Goldman, and if I were'nt terrible with names I'd list off some of the suffragists, Eleanor Roosevelt, Amelia Earhart.

Last night, I watched an interview with Kim Novak (actress from Vertigo and other movies), which was about the first interview she did in 35 years or so. She's bipolar and spoke through tears about making the decision to leave Hollywood and move to a remote location in Oregon where she could paint. Her painting is awesome! Maybe you can see it online; it was broadcast on Turner Classic Movies.
 
There are so many for sure. Most recently I've admired Laura Hildebrand - not just for her riveting books (Unbroken, Seabisquit sp) - but how she deals with accomplishing this writing while dealing with Chronic Fatigue Syndrome.

I've tried to complete certain projects for decades and PTSD symptoms continually rendered me such that I wouldn't be able to work on them for long periods. Sometimes I'd feel like giving up. Living was so difficult esp. without treatment back then. But Laura does what she can when she can and the results are tremendous. Inspirational.
 
I've thought about who some of my role models are before, but only today considered who were my favorites. My favorites come from my own family. That was a surprise to me: there are four of them. The #2 spot is tied between my eldest sister (who is a half sister), my paternal grandmother, and my paternal great-grand mother. I'll work from the #2s to #1 -

My (half) sister, 13 years my senior, basically raised me from the time I was five, after my mother was in a car accident. She couldn't have children because of what happened to her when she was younger, but she was a strong supporter of the feminist movement in the 60's and 70's and she's had a very good life being married to my wonderful brother-in-law for 47 years. She just completed her 7th round of chemo for ovarian and uterine cancer. She is my rock and today is her birthday!

My paternal grandmother was a midwife. She delivered 756 babies. Along with my paternal grandfather, they adopted seventeen children throughout their lives together. After Grandpa died, and two more husbands passed, she lived with us until she died at 96.

My paternal great-grandmother and paternal great-grandfather had five children. All of the children were under 12 years when he died. He owned a life insurance policy that named my p. great-grandmother as beneficiary. However, the laws at the time were set up so that proceeds from life insurance could only benefit men (business associates, bankers, or the father and/or brother(s) of the deceased). My paternal great-grandmother took the matter all the way to the Supreme Court of the U.S. won the case on July 27, 1877. New laws were passed allowing men to name their wife, daughter(s) or any female as a beneficiary to a life insurance policy, and separate estate proceeds going to the creditors of a deceased person from proceeds being paid to named beneficiaries from life insurance proceeds. Without this law in place, I may never had the chance to go to college.

#1 is my mother. She was the eldest of seven and the only female. She was sexually molested in a dirt field coming home from school when she was 15. She became pregnant and was forced to marry the man - those things often happened back in the "olden days" particularly when it involved neighbors. Their parents made them get their own place and "be responsible". He drank and couldn't keep a job. She dropped out of school and worked nights as a seamstress in a laundry. She rode the bus and took their child, my eldest (half) sister, with her.

During junior high school, my mother had befriended another girl who was an orphan and had been placed in different homes during her childhood. The two of them dreamed of a better future and encouraged each other. After my (half) sister was born, the friend encouraged my mother to return to school and get her high school diploma (despite the friend having decided she wouldn't continue high school herself). Three years later, my grandparents had my (half) sister on the day of my mother's graduation. My mother attended the party afterwards then went to work.

When she returned home the next morning, she was gang molested by her drunk husband and his three friends. She and my (half) sister lived with my grand-parents afterwards. She divorced her husband, worked two jobs for a while then became the personal seamstress for her friend who was beginning to become a movie celebrity. The friend allowed my mother flexibility to care for my sister and to work helping to enact laws that changed the "consensual" age from 12 to 18 in their state. (The gang molestation occurred when my mother was 17) Her former husband was not convicted since they were married at the time, but his three friends were convicted and sent to prison (for a relatively short period).

My mother continued to work as the personal seamstress for her friend, the celebrity, and also began costume designing for a movie studio. At one point, she left my sister with an elderly neighbor woman so she could go to work. The woman went out to get groceries. Her husband brutally molested my (half) sister during the time his wife was shopping. My mother saw to it that justice was served. The molester was eventually convicted to a seven year term, but died after being beaten by other inmates.

I thought about the title of this thread off-and-on throughout the day while at work. Each time I'd get a little misty eyed. I didn't know why I was getting misty eyed, but knew work wasn't the place for it and had to stop thinking about this thread. Then on the way home I started bawling at the realization who my strong role models are, for what they went through, and for the women (and men) here whose stories I've read here over the last several weeks.

Writing some about the struggles the women in my life have endured has strengthened something in me.
I know my response was different than choosing a public figure whom I admire, and I hope my response hasn't offended.

I realize now how fortunate I've been for having strong role models in my life. And I cry out to everyone here whose own story may be somehow similar to my mother's or my sister's that you may have strength, determination and the endurance to heal.

YOU are the beautiful strong women (and men) that currently touch my life. YOU I admire.

:hug:
Drew
 
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Wow! Thanks for all your replies :happy: Drew, that is such an amazing story!!! You and 2penny are so lucky!

Its kind of funny, so many times I've wished my life was easier... but I'm pretty sure that every role model mentioned here has been through what I'm sure felt like unbearable struggles!

Do you think that maybe one day our lives, our struggles will be as meaningful to future generations?
 
Do you think that maybe one day our lives, our struggles will be as meaningful to future generations?

Gosh, I sure hope so Flyaway. At least within my own family, I do.

I've been thinking that I want to get involved in some sort of volunteer activity particularly in regards with helping women or teens "that have been though things". And, after my experience with this thread (and writing) I am much more motivated to do so. (1) Because it's simply needed - the abuse has to be addressed, and hopefully (but doubtful) eliminated. And (2) because helping to change things is part of my legacy. I knew those things I wrote about the women in my family, but sort of thought "Wow. What a crappy thing to go through. And how cool they did something." But now I feel like it's time to pay back / pay forward.
 
how she deals with accomplishing this writing while dealing with Chronic Fatigue Syndrome.

Whoa! I didn't know that she was dealing that! That makes me respect her even more! I just finished my second book last month, and the end of this one almost broke me. Something about the PTSD diagnosis and working through the trauma plus trying to hit a publisher's deadline almost did me in.

My paternal grandmother was a midwife. She delivered 756 babies.

Double whoa! That's amazing! And what an amazing story, @DMerish, thanks for sharing it!

Writing some about the struggles the women in my life have endured has strengthened something in me.

I agree. It strengthens me, too, to think about what the women in my own life (not those that are in the public eye) and what they have endured.
 
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