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Cheryl Strayed
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We are, I am, you are. Rich wrote many lines that meant something important to me over the course of her long career, but that one strikes me as core. In those six lean words, she bound us together — the entire beautiful and ugly mass of us made, by virtue of her words, indivisible. Indivisibility is classic Rich. She was a great connector of things: art to politics, love to rage, consciousness to action, society to self, power to wound, me to you, us to her.

[…]

She believed in the power of art, not only its beauty and necessity but also the real, raw, actual power of it. She agitated for poetry “as living language, the core of every language, something that is still spoken, aloud or in the mind, muttered in secret, subversive, reaching around corners, crumpled into a pocket, performed to a community, read aloud to the dying, recited by heart, scratched or sprayed on a wall. That kind of language.”

And she wrote that kind of language. From the heart and the mind. From the gut and the crotch. She pulled us into the deep waters of her own darkest reckoning and made us understand that the reckoning was ours too. The ferocity of her vision was matched only by the tenderness at its root.

A beautiful remembrance of beloved poet Adrienne Rich, who passed away in 2012, by the one and only Cheryl “Dear Sugar” Strayed
That’s what authority is. When you’re actually writing from that deepest place within you, if you tell the truth, you’re using your greatest power and your greatest authority. That’s a key piece, not just doing that as a writer but when we talk about healing. Whatever the loss may be, not avoiding that wound, not trying to have it covered up and pretend it’s not there but rather to look into it.
The brilliant Cheryl Strayed adds to our archive of wisdom on writing in this interview from The Millions. Previously. Treat yourself to her Tiny Beautiful Things: Advice on Love and Life from Dear Sugar – one of the most moving things you’ll ever read.
It’s up to us, it’s up to our generation, to just not ask for permission. I think that not asking for permission to be human is a really big part of being a fully actualized human.
The Millions interview the wise and wonderful Cheryl Strayed, a.k.a. Dear Sugar. Her Tiny Beautiful Things: Advice on Love and Life from Dear Sugar is an absolute treasure.
Every artist at some point had to decide that they didn’t have to justify themselves to the people around them.
Fantastic interview with the wise and wonderful Cheryl Strayed, a.k.a. Dear Sugar, whose  Tiny Beautiful Things: Advice on Love and Life from Dear Sugar is one of the most moving and heartening things you’ll ever read.
Complement with other timeless definitions of art and the artist.
Every artist at some point had to decide that they didn’t have to justify themselves to the people around them.

Fantastic interview with the wise and wonderful Cheryl Strayed, a.k.a. Dear Sugar, whose  Tiny Beautiful Things: Advice on Love and Life from Dear Sugar is one of the most moving and heartening things you’ll ever read.

Complement with other timeless definitions of art and the artist.

I didn’t know that I could be a writer. I grew up working class and poor. I wasn’t around educated people or people who would ever dream of going off and being an artist of any sort. I had no awareness of that, but I became an avid reader. I read beyond my years, always reaching for the next thing.

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You just have to push forward. You have to follow your vision and hope for the best. You have to write for love.

Fantastic interview with Cheryl Strayed, better-known as Dear Sugar, on The Great Discontent. Her Tiny Beautiful Things is one of the best things you’ll ever read.