The Dance of the Dissident Daughter by Sue Monk Kidd 1996
This is a memoir of a spiritual treatise of learning, focussing on our inner need to be our own. Monk encourages us to look into our spirit to reassure, question, and heal from the world as a whole, our systemic patriarchy, and our own lack of belief in our own strong, capable selves. This is a text that I need to read every year- in gratitude like a checkup with my heart.
https://youtu.be/_rvexfQLDsM?si=7-W_OlLydpfWHywa
Joy Oladokun
"someone that i used to be"
Part of my love for this book comes from my own fledgling attempts to embrace who I am instead of what others expected me to be. This book came out while I was pregnant and living in Capitan, New Mexico. Mariah and I were living in the New Mexico mountains which became our duala. Liberty was the baby that I wasn’t supposed to be able to have. I was surrounded by several “Mountain Mothers” who welcomed Mariah and me into their loving acceptance before, during, and after the delivery. That definitely tracks when thinking about the life Liberty lived. Betty E Shrecengost was a stalwart part of Lincoln, New Mexico. She invited me into her family and taught me many things about living alongside the mountains. Including how to ride a horse while big and pregnant. The women of the Salazar clam ran the museum for decades and they enveloped me with their wisdom and acceptance. They also taught me how to cook like New Mexico. Grandmother Salazar talked about this book together after Liberty was born, including that as mothers we needed to accept ourselves, grow, and heal.
”We must wake up, journey, name, challenge, shed, reclaim, ground, and heal. “
I needed this book at this time again to find my way back to who I am and can be. In some ways, I feel lost, and discarded, and in others: I am awakening. It is okay to be both. “You can create a path of your own by looking within yourself and listening to your soul, cultivating your own ways of experiencing the sacred and then practicing it. Practicing until you make it a song that sings you.” Now as we move into the holidays, please share your love with those around you. Have a conversation, share a meal, and maybe a genuine hug. All of us are on a journey, our fuel is the love we have for ourselves, and the love we choose to share with others.
https://youtu.be/qXuPyE7CKZQ?si=Wk5dyFD0o57rl2W4
More of my favorite quotes from Sue Monk Kidd: