Monday, 2 June 2014

Maya Angelou, Never a Caged Bird



I had the pleasure of coming across Dr Maya Angelou’s writings in my teens when many things did not make sense.

As a shy girl who hardly uttered a word; my spare time was mostly spent with my nose in a book, playing cassettes in my portable stereo or scribbling notes in my diary. I was slightly obese, my hair rebelled against school rules and it seemed my chest would forever be flat. Having had been raised in a predominantly black area, I had recently been placed in a multiracial school which was in a largely Afrikaans town. Conforming to the new culture and language had its challenges.

In the midst of my teenage blues I came across Maya Angelou’s work, though my memory escapes exactly which book or publication it was. Her distinct yet simple style of writing connected with me as if we were having a face-to-face conversation. At that moment I became an immediate fan, volunteered myself as a student of her teachings and as her spiritual daughter.

I was intrigued by this woman. She was black and proud without being loud. She looked nothing like a beauty queen and yet she oozed confidence I could not comprehend. She had taken many lashes in her life including being raped as a child and living as a mute to being racially discriminated against, yet she refused to bear the scars on her back.

Outspoken and firm in her beliefs, she was never caged. She was a free bird that leapt on the back of the wind and dared to claim the sky. I realised that if a woman with so many odds against her could believe that she was unshakable and refused to be defeated, so could I.

Fast forward to years later, I’m a mature woman who has encountered many clouds and have risen above them. “I laugh like I’ve got gold mines digging in my own back yard” and “walk like I have oil wells pumping in my living room”.  I also have no doubt that I’m a phenomenal woman, just as I am. Thanks to powerful words instilled in me since my youth.

Over the years I read just about every piece of work that Maya Angelou has ever published and followed her life with interest.

When I heard the news of her passing, I immediately posted on social networks that I was “mourning her loss”. I soon revisited my treasured collection of her books and a recording of her interview on Oprah’s Next Chapter that I’ve kept and watched repeatedly. It soon dawned on me that it would not make sense to mourn this remarkable life. It is rather compelling to celebrate its fullness and achievements.

In her book “Letter to My Daughter”, Maya Angelou wrote that when she found herself filling with rage over the loss of a loved one, she quickly redirected her focus to what she learned from them and what legacy was left which could help her in the art of living a good life.

Well, here’s a few of the many things I drank from her fountain of wisdom:

-        Love liberates.

-       When you get, give. When you learn, teach.

-       You can be changed by what happens to you, but refuse to be reduced by it .

-   Try to be a rainbow in someone’s cloud. Every day you should reach out and touch someone.

-   Words are things. Be careful about the words you use and the words you allow to be used in your house.

-    When you decide something with an open heart, you’ll make the right decision.

-    Make an effort to change things you don’t like but never complain. If you cannot make a change, change the way you’ve been thinking. You might find a new solution.

-    Be certain that you don’t die without having done something wonderful for humanity.

-    Just do right. Try to be all you can be. Try to be the best human being you can be. Do it because it is the right thing to do.

With this I thank God for her life and for blessing her with talent and wisdom that she generously shared. May her soul rest in peace.


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