Today’s post is the last post, the post for the Letter Z in the Blogging A to Z Challenge in which I enrolled so as to help me get some of the basics about how this site views the topic of Women’s Legacy. It has been a very good experience: fun, educational, and it provided me with the structure to be disciplined and write these 26 articles. I’ve reviewed many of the core concepts that feed into our motto of Live Your Legacy Now, and have a long list of topics I am excited to share with readers.
Zealotry
Zealotry of all forms, religious, political and beyond, impact women in all aspects of our lives. Zealots passionately believe they know truth and they want to impose it upon others. Zealotry feasts on critiques of how women look, act, and behave. It is all the way to whom women love and how they were born. Reframing is one of the most effective ways to react to zealous nonphysical infringements into our personal lives. Why? Because we have control over how we choose to group, control, and attend to information.
Zaftig
Women who are “plus” size, for example, may choose to view themselves as zaftig rather than fat or plump. Zaftig is a Yiddish word that means ample or juicy. I personally would rather be more than enough and succulent than just a little bit and dried up. Reframing and rephrasing are powerful tools. How we view and present ourselves is our business.
Zami
Biomythography is the term Audre Lorde coined for her 1992 memoir/novel/personal mythology Zami: A New Spelling of My Name: A Biomythography. Zami tells the story of living life as a black lesbian in mid-20th Century America. Zealots have a field day with any person fitting any of the assumptions they place on her. She rose above all those little minds. Zami might be any woman who writes her own biomythography.
Z is fiercely independent. So are we. What are the A to Zs of your biomythography?