This weekâs reading list is a lot more âwriter focused,â if you will. As Iâve tried to re-center myself on what really matters in terms of my career and business, Iâve been taking intentional time to soak in othersâ creativity, rather than being solely focused on cultivating my own.
Though I am a writer by trade, sometimes I grow the most when Iâm reading, absorbing, and learning from others. Thatâs where my reading list stems from this week. (And as always, hereâs where you can see other weeks.)
1. First thing I loved and resonated with this week is this essay by Victoria Alejandra Garayalde on why she writes.
âIf you were to ask me why I write, I would say itâs because I am bicultural, because I suffer from depression, because I felt alone for so long, because reading the vulnerable words so many authors have put into books taught me that I too belong to this world and to you and to myself. But mostly, I write because I need you and see you, and I write out of the desperate and fragile hope that you might see and need me too. I see writing as a way for me to create a path of connection to others, to this life, and to myself. Itâs not easy to forge a path through all the debris of self-doubt, fear, self-hatred, and outside messages of selfishness and expectations. This is why I write in the mornings, because that is when anything and everything feels possibleâor at least enough to warrant an attempt.â
I love this because itâs a reflection of why writing truly is so important. I also think itâs amazing to read other peopleâs âwhysâ and understand how vastly different (and beautiful) they all are. Victoriaâs story is strong, too, because she talks about the differences of her two cultures and the struggle for identity and belonging within each of them.
2. Beautiful language is something Iâve noticed this week, as Iâve tried to take more me time and sit and just read. This week I stumbled across a beautiful excerpt by Jeannine Ouellette, âThe Part That Burnsâ.
ââCarl! Sugar!â Phoebe shouts whenever she sees a squirrel outside, as if Carl and Sugar are the only two squirrels in the world. As if they are entirely interchangeable with one anotherâand all other squirrels, for that matter. Just blurry bodies, running. Which they are, I suppose. Like the rest of us.â
I think the reason this section stood out to me so much was because how simple and universal Ouelletteâs words are. She talks about squirrels, yes, but she says so much more than that about who we are as humans, how weâre all trying to find our purpose. Purpose is something I often wrestle with. Sure, Iâm pursuing a life and career thatâs truly aligned with what I love, but sometimes I really struggle trying to find my place with a new role as a âmotherâ to my boyfriendâs son, in a new stage in life, in starting a business. Having a reminder that weâre all just running around trying to figure it out is a comfort.
3. I love this poignant poem by Julia Gari Weiss talking about sexism in the workplace in a profoundly beautiful and simple way.
âYouâre so furious that you default
into autopilot theyâve forced.
A smoking volcano. You donât respond.
You sit there as they wish
completely and utterly silent
wondering when youâll erupt.â
I love thisâit says so much in the last few lines. I also love that the poem both talks about the workplace and the speakerâs relationship. It makes a very strong statement about how sexism happens, often unconsciously, by the people closest to us, too.
4. Another striking poem is âA List Of Watersâ by Bryce Emely that talks about abuse and the painful fabric it weaves in the lives of those it touches.
Poetry that talks about abuse fascinates me because itâs such a painful topic and needs to be handled with grace. Emely did just that, and I love not only the language, but the breaks in each of the lines, creating even more tension. This poem really struck a cord with me.
5. I subscribe to several poetry sites and since I donât always have the pleasure of writing it on the daily anymore (life just gets busy!) I find that I am always soaking it up whenever I can. This poem by Shakthi Shrima about sexual identity was incredible.
Though I donât necessarily relate to the content, the message of self-love and understanding is universal. I found myself really resonating with the speakerâs search for meaning and self, and trying to understand her own body in relation to the worldâsomething I think needs to be discussed even more in our contemporary culture. So often we feel lost, confused, and unsure of who we are. This poem expresses that and reminds us that our search for identityâand sexual identityâisnât supposed to be faced alone.
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Featured Image Credit: Bundo Kim

