Truthful Stories: Connecting to Our Voices
/The Girl With the Louding Voice, part 3
For a summary, and first point, read part 1 here.
For a second point, read part 2 here.
What Sustains Us: Connection to Our Voice
Obviously voice is a central theme of Adunni’s story, as evident from the title of the book, and I really did appreciate the way in which her voice and her wants for her voice carried throughout. From the beginning, Adduni is clear. She says from the get-go, “I don’t just want to be having any kind voice … I want a louding voice” (25, emphasis mine). Her knowing carries her, and continues to grow. She hangs on to her want, adding to it as she goes: “I want to enter a room and people will hear me even before I open my mouth to be speaking. I want to live in this life and help many people so that when I grow old and die, I will still be living through the people I am helping” (263-264).
Her story is not in any way smooth or painless; rather, it is fraught with peril and agony. Again in her voice: “It is not so easy when you are born into a life of no money and plenty suffering, a life you didn’t choose for yourself. Sometimes I wish I can just believe for a good life and it will magic and happen for me, just like that. But maybe, to believe it in my mind is the start, so I nod my head, drag it real slow up and down as I am saying: ‘Tomorrow will be better than today. I am a somebody of value’” (264). She uses her voice to remind herself of her innate worth and value. “I am not a wasted waste; I am Adunni,” she says, “A person important enough because my tomorrow will be better than today. I talk to myself … “ (278).
Adunni remains committed to her voice — to her thoughts, her feelings, her wants, her needs, her worth.
What about Me, and What About You?
Taken altogether I am left to wonder what good Adunni prompts in me. What does she inspire me to do? How does she inspire me to be? The specifics of my answers will continue to unfold, but here’s what I know for sure right now:
I want to be connected to others.
I want to be connected to my body.
I want to be connected to my voice.
I want a louding voice, too.
A truth-telling voice.
A kind voice.
A courageous voice.
A voice that hopes and helps and heals.
Today and however many days I am able, I set my intention to foster my voice, and to send my voice out into the world. How about you?