My mother painted and wrote through all of her adventures which included traveling and raising children. As her only daughter I am embarrassed to admit how critical I was of her. I wanted my Mom to promote herself more. I wanted her to speak up to my father differently. I wanted her to work bigger and to overflow her notebooks. But as I look through her work and her words I realize that as much as I was disparaging of her — she is so much of the impetus for what I do and how I try to go forward. I see some faults and want to do better. Yet it has finally occurred to me that maybe that is the sign of a great teacher, letting her child/student feel empowered to do better in the world.
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‘I am your own way of looking at things,’ she said. ‘When you allow me to live with you, every glance at the world around you will be a sort of salvation.’ And I took her hand.
–William Stafford, from “When I Met My Muse,” You Must Revise Your Life (University of Michigan Press, 1991)