Chingona, Dolores Huerta, Jennifer Gordon Low, Madeline Albright, Medal of Freedom awards 2012, Pat Summit, Strong Women, Toni Morrison

The 5 Women Awarded the Medal of Freedom 2012

Today President Obama’s awarded the Medal of Freedom to these five women: 

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Madeline Albright former Secretary of State and the first woman to hold the top U.S. diplomatic job. Granddaughter of Holocaust victims and who also survived the WW II Blitz.

Juliette Gordon Low, who 100 years ago founded the Girl Scouts, at 45 years of age, divorced, deaf and childless. Her purpose, “to train girls to take their rightful places in life, first as good women, then as good citizens, wives, and mothers.

AP Photo

Dolores Huerta, co-founder of  the United Farm Workers of America. Daughter of a divorced parent, her community activism started when she was in Girl Scout’s. Huerta has 11 children. She became a teacher but resigned.
 ” I couldn’t stand seeing kids come to class hungry and needing shoes. I thought I could do more by organizing farm workers than by trying to teach their hungry children.”

AP photo

Toni Morrison, author of such novels as “Song of Solomon” and “Beloved.” Her life began during the severe economic times of the Great Depression. She became an English professor and editor before she became an author with over 25 fiction, non-fiction, and children’s books, as well as a playwright. “Freeing yourself was one thing; claiming ownership of that freed self was another.” 


Pat Summit, former basketball coach who led the University of Tennessee women’s basketball team to more NCAA Final Four appearances than any other team.  She coached the U.S. women’s team to an Olympic gold medal, becoming the first U.S. Olympian to win a basketball medal and coach a medal-winning team. Now battling Alzeheimer’s, she has retired after 38 years. “There’s not going to be any pity party and I’ll make sure of that.


This year’s there are more women than ever before receiving the Medal of Freedom. This is the nation’s highest civilian honor. It is presented to individuals who have made especially meritorious contributions to the national interests of the United States, to world peace or to other significant endeavors.


It is not known how many women have received the award since it’s inception by President Harry S. Truman in 1945, but this year there are five female recipients out of 13 awardee’s. In a count, from available data the last nineteen years, only 42 women out of approximately 225 had received the award. 


The stat’s are mentioned just to give you an understanding of these women’s significant achievements. We don’t need to wait for next year’s Women’s History Month to celebrate women. These awards are something to acknowledge, celebrate, and share with other women, especially daughters, nieces, granddaughters. 


These women did not have an easy life, all had challenges, all of them found their purpose, and contributed to their community and society. And that has all the makings of strong women.  


Authors, Chingona, Chingonas, How to be a Chingona, Latina writer, Loose Woman, Sandra Cisneros, Strong Women, Wisdom

How to Be a Chingona in Ten Easy Steps-Sandra Cisneros

For some reason I had Sandra Cisneros on my mind. In my quest for something interesting to read tonight I pulled out her books from my bookshelf. 


LOOSE WOMAN is always an interesting book of poems and seemed apropos to read on a full moon night. I reread my favorite poem “You Bring Out the Mexican in Me,” and wished I had picked up a Cabernet at Trader Joe’s. If you’ve never heard it before, take a listen. She read the poem on NPR a few years ago.

So back to Sandra. I put the book of poems away and jumped on my laptop to view Sandra’s site (yes, I know I’m being very familiar but that’s what her writing does to me,I think she’s my amiga or comadre). I looked for her 2012 presentations, but they are in North Carolina and Japan.

Sandra spoke at the Coca Cola Tour Adelante a few days ago (unfortunately the video disappeared),
but,
I took notes of her talk so I’ll list the points. 

1. Live for your own approval. Center yourself. Be alone. Create your own space.

2 .Discover your own powers. What floods you with joy?

3 .Find true humility and practice it.

4 .Keep your palabra, your word.

5. What are you using to cover or mask your pain? Address it.

6. Your only true possessions are your actions.

7. Seek forgiveness.

8. Live in the present moment.

9. Depression has a purpose if you use it before it uses you. (Profound wisdom). Transform it to light. Compost it through art. If you can’t do it by yourself, see a professional curandera (healer, therapist).

10. Listen to your body.

There you go, 10 steps in 10 minutes. Are you feeling the power yet?

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These are my own thoughts on a definition for Chingona*. Feel free to add your own:

*Bad ass, powerful, wise woman, muy macha, activist in their community and/or home, talented, smart, resourceful, kick ass…