May, more than any other month of the year, wants us to feel most alive. - Fennel Hudson
This time is a microcosm of life-as-we-know-it. It is joyous
and grief-filled in turn, exhaustingly busy but interspersed with gentle days
of birdsong and flowers blooming and dinner off the grill.
It has dark moments and a sometimes sagging middle. Times of
sheer light and joy and times of happily-ever-after. It is populated with
people we love, people who interest us, people we wish we could have somehow
avoided. It navigates every emotion known to...anyone. It has excitement and
passion and heartbreaking loss.
May 29, 1851, Sojourner
Truth delivered her "Ain't I a
Woman?" speech at the Women’s Rights Convention in Akron, Ohio. “And ain't
I a woman? Look at me! Look at my arm! I have ploughed and planted, and
gathered into barns, and no man could head me! And ain't I a woman? I could
work as much and eat as much as a man—when I could get it—and bear the lash as
well! And ain't I a woman? I have borne 13 children, and seen most all sold off
to slavery, and when I cried out with my mother's grief, none but Jesus heard
me! And ain't I a woman?”
On May 15, 1869, Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady
Stanton founded the National Woman Suffrage Association.
May
20-22, 1932, Amelia Earhart became the first woman (and only the second pilot) to
fly nonstop and solo across the Atlantic Ocean.
May
17, 1954, the U.S. Supreme Court unanimously ruled that segregation of public
schools "solely on the basis of race" denied black children
"equal educational opportunity" even though "physical facilities
and other 'tangible' factors may have been equal. Separate educational
facilities are inherently unequal."
Margaret
Fuller, the first female foreign correspondent, and Arabella Mansfield, the
first American woman attorney, were born in May. So were Golda Meir, Nellie Bly,
and Florence Nightingale. (Many of these citations are available on http://www.historyplace.com/specials/calendar/may.htm I went there to look things up and didn't want to leave... - lf)
The month of May is a romance novel, isn't it? Better some
years than others, but full of everything that makes a good story. Strength,
emotion, accomplishment, empowerment, relationships of all kinds. The woman’s
journey told by ones who both understand and embrace it.
Sorry for your loss. May is certainly a popular month for birthdays!
ReplyDeleteI met my SO of three years in the first week of May. I started my new acrylics class this month too. It feels like this year has gone by in a blink of an eye!
Goodness, it's already June. Summer is just around the corner.
It's certainly flying by, isn't it? But time always does. :-)
DeleteI love seeing what all these powerful and amazing women have done!! Go girls!
ReplyDeleteInspiring, isn't it? I loved seeing it, too.
DeleteGreat and educational post! I like May, mostly because that is the start of lake season! ;-)
ReplyDeleteEspecially this year, right? :-)
DeleteLovely post as always Liz! Very interesting...and May is a favourite month for me too.
ReplyDeleteIt's a giver of many gifts, isn't it? Thanks, Bonnie.
DeleteYour May sounds like a full year. You are blessed, Liz.
ReplyDeleteI am, and I need to remember it. Thanks, Nora.
DeleteVery inspiring and uplifting, Liz. It's a high-energy month for many, past and present. I wonder what June will bring.
ReplyDeleteI wonder, too. I think it's also a high-energy month for many.
DeleteWhat a beautiful post! I enjoyed every word of it!
ReplyDeleteI love this post. Very poignant. And I love "Ain't I A Woman". We go through her speech in US History at the middle school where I teach. It gets me every time.
ReplyDeleteI love it, too!
DeleteLiz, what a moving and profound post. I love you named so many of the she-roes I have admired since I was a child and read biographies of them. Wonderful post in every way. Happy (belated) Anniversary and sending hugs on the poignant emotions you feel by losing dear ones.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Joan. I was amazed at how many May connections there were to she-roes.
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