3 Quotes & Sayings By Kathleen Dean Moore

Kathleen Dean Moore has been a leading voice for social justice since the early 1980s, when she co-founded the National Organization for Women. In the years since then, she has been a tireless advocate for women and children, candid about her own personal struggles to maintain relationships and balance work and family. Yet she is best known as the author of The Secret Thoughts of Successful Women, a landmark book that helped millions to find self-confidence and self-worth.

1
The earth offers gift after gift–life and the living of it, light and the return of it, the growing things, the roaring things, fire and nightmares, falling water and the wisdom of friends, forgiveness. My god, the forgiveness, time, and the scouring tides. How does one accept gifts as great as these and hold them in the mind? Failing to notice a gift dishonors it, and deflects the love of the giver. That's what's wrong with living a careless life, storing up sorrow, waking up regretful, walking unaware. But to turn the gift in your hand, to say, this is wonderful and beautiful, this is a great gift–this honors the gift and the giver of it. Maybe this is what [my friend] Hank has been trying to make me understand: Notice the gift. Be astonished at it. Be glad for it, care about it. Keep it in mind. This is the greatest gift a person can give in return. 'This is your work, ' my friend told me, 'which is a work of substance and prayer and mad attentiveness, which is the real deal, which is why we are here. Kathleen Dean Moore
2
Deciding we won't drive to that chain grocery store and buy that imported pineapple is a path to liberation. Deciding to walk to the farmers' market and buy fresh, local peas is like spitting in the eye of the industries that control us. Every act of refusal is also an act of assent. Every time we way no to consumer culture, we say yes to something more beautiful and sustaining. Life is not something we go through or that happens to us; it's something we create by our own decisions. Kathleen Dean Moore