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9780767912389

What Keeps Me Standing Letters from Black Grandmothers on Peace, Hope and Inspiration

by
  • ISBN13:

    9780767912389

  • ISBN10:

    0767912381

  • Edition: Reprint
  • Format: Paperback
  • Copyright: 2005-04-05
  • Publisher: Crown
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Supplemental Materials

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Summary

In his previous bestsellers,Think and Grow RichandWhat Makes the Great Great, Dennis Kimbro revealed the success secrets of highly touted entrepreneurs, corporate climbers, and Olympic athletes, as well as famous black Americans from George Washington Carver to Bill Cosby, Oprah Winfrey, and Jesse Jackson. InWhat Keeps Me Standing,he turns to another group of sages and mentors: the grandmothers who have long been the backbone of the African American family and community. Over a period of five years, Kimbro contacted one thousand grandmothers--women from a wide range of backgrounds and locations--asking, "If you had to write a one page letter to your children or the next generation, what would you tell them about life?" Their answers, collected here, show that success in life cannot be measured in terms of wealth and material goods alone. The lives they describe and the advice they proffer capture both a richness in spirit and a strong belief in the power of every individual to take charge of his or her own destiny. In the face of racism, both blatant and subtle, financial struggles, and personal setbacks, black grandmothers have helped their communities in thousands of tangible and intangible ways, providing support, inspiration, and love not only to their own children and grandchildren but also to neighbors, friends, and extended families. Filled with examples of how even the smallest acts of kindness and compassion can make a difference in the world, What Keeps Me Standing is a treasure trove of the wisdom that comes with years of experience, transformation, and growth. It is the perfect gift. From the Hardcover edition.

Author Biography

<p>DENNIS KIMBRO is a motivational speaker and the author of the bestselling <i>Think and Grow Rich, Daily Motivations for African American Success, </i>and<i> What Makes the Great Great</i>. He lives in Decatur, Georgia, with his family.</p>

Table of Contents

Introduction 1(8)
Why I Was Placed on Earth. Surviving Is Easy; Living Is Difficult. 9(2)
Life Is the Greatest of All Statements; Make Sure Yours Speaks Volumes. 11(5)
Chapter One: Life Is the Greatest of All Statements
What I Learned About Life and Success in the Cotton Fields of Louisiana
16(4)
To Dare Guide a Life
20(1)
A Good Book Is Your Most Treasured Possession
21(3)
Look Where You Came From
24(1)
Hwe Wo Ho So Yiye
25(1)
This Letter Is a Gift of Happiness
26(2)
Success Ain't Sitting Still
28(1)
Respect Isn't a Quality That Is Easily Granted. It Can Only Be Earned.
29(6)
You Are a Miracle
35(2)
Sing Your Song
37(1)
Not My Will but Thy Will Be Done
38(5)
What You Call No Chance, May Be Your Only Chance
43(1)
A Good Example Is the Best Sermon You Can Preach
44(1)
Once a Teacher, Always a Teacher
45(1)
What Is Life?
46(5)
By This Guiding Light so Don't Allow the Trappings of Life to Distract You from the Meaning of Life
51(1)
A Final Word or Two on the Greatest of All Statements
52(6)
Chapter Two: Live This Day
Jump Feet first into Life and Participate
58(3)
With All Thy Getting
61(3)
Today Is Where Your Future Begins
64(1)
Snatch the Seconds of the Day as if You Only Had This Day to Live
65(1)
Live Your Dash
66(2)
If I Could Live My Life Again
68(1)
Do It Now!
69(1)
Closing Comments on Live This Day
70(7)
Chapter Three: Hope
A Place Called Hope (1)
77(1)
The Power of Hope
77(1)
The Hope and Contributions of Generations Gone Before
78(2)
Hope-It's What Keeps Me Standing!
80(1)
The Positive Expectation of a Bright Tomorrow
81(1)
Overcoming Obstacles
82(1)
Where There Is Hope, There's Life
83(2)
He's an On-Time God, Yes He Is
85(3)
What the Dying Teach Us
88(2)
A Place Called Hope (2)
90(5)
Not a Moment Without Hope
95(1)
This Is Your Mission
96(1)
You've Got to Have Hope
97(1)
Serving Others Who Are Hurting
98(2)
Some Final Words on Hope
100(7)
Chapter Four: Count It All Joy!
My Soul Sings the Hymn "I Won't Complain"
107(2)
The Only Two Words You Should Ever Speak
109(1)
Count It All Joy!
109(2)
I Am Grateful
111(1)
An Attitude of Thanksgiving
112(1)
Not a Burden, a Blessing
113(1)
Pass the Blessings On to Others
114(4)
Every Day Is a Blessing
118(1)
I Am Blessed!
119(2)
The Letter That Changed My Life
121(6)
Counting My Blessings
127(5)
She Was Most Blessed
132(2)
Bless the Lives of Others
134(4)
Final Thoughts on Count It All Joy!
138(7)
Chapter Five: Love Letter
Love Is Awesome
145(1)
Love Them Unconditionally
145(1)
Love Is Divine
146(1)
Love Yourself
147(2)
The Greatest of These Is Love
149(1)
A Single Word
150(1)
Love Is as Simple as ABC
150(2)
Love Is...
152(1)
The Marvelous Power of Love
153(2)
Love Is the Best Remedy
155(1)
A Lot of Love Lasts Forever
156(2)
The Unending Love of Friends
158(2)
Love Knows No Color (1)
160(1)
Drying Her Son's Tears After a Relationship Went Awry
161(2)
Have I Taught You to Love?
163(1)
A Mother's Love Is the Sweetest
164(3)
Love Knows No Color (2)
167(11)
Chapter Six: Wanted: A Man
Let There Be Men
178(1)
Blessed Boys!
179(2)
The True Measure of a Man
181(1)
Fatherhood
182(1)
A Father Is Hands-On, and Those Hands Never Let Go
182(3)
Being a Man Is a Right to Be Earned
185(1)
Do You Call Yourself a Man?
186(2)
A Real Man
188(1)
The Making of a Man
189(4)
Succeeding Together
193(3)
I Am Proud of You
196(1)
Love, Not Drugs
197(3)
A Letter to My Grandson Who Looks Forward to His Wedding Day
200(1)
Blessed Are the Husband and Wife
201(1)
The Love We've Lost
202(4)
A Closing Word or Two on Wanted: A Man
206(7)
Chapter Seven: Go and Do Likewise
Make a Contribution
213(1)
Small Acts of Kindness
214(1)
Give a Piece of Your Spirit
214(2)
Love Them to Life!
216(1)
A Letter to My Grandson to Say, "Thank You"
217(2)
One Good Turn Deserves Another
219(2)
There's Always Room at the Inn
221(3)
It Takes a Village to Raise a Child
224(2)
The Quickest Way to Heaven
226(1)
Never Discount a Small Act of Kindness
227(2)
Speaking of Kindness, You Can Always Be Kind to Yourself
229(2)
Delight in Doing Good
231(1)
Pass It On
231(6)
Chapter Eight What Keeps Me Standing
Prayer Touches the Hand That Moves the World
237(2)
Leave It to God
239(1)
The Prescription for Survival
239(1)
Let Us Be Thankful
240(1)
Prayer Is...
241(1)
I May Not Know What the Future Holds but I Certainly Know Who Holds the Future
242(2)
A Little Faith in a Great God
244(1)
Sunday Service Is the Highlight of My Week
245(1)
No One Can Stop Me from Praying
246(2)
A Special Prayer for My Grandson
248(1)
Have I Taught You How to Pray?
249(1)
A Prayer for a Miracle Baby
250(2)
Buy a Bible and Use It
252(1)
For Those Who Have Gone Before
253(3)
In My Grandsons' Names
256(3)
"It Won't Be Your Tears That Move the Hand of God. It Will Be Your Faith!"
259(2)
A Few Closing Words on What Keeps Me Standing
261(4)
Afterword 265(2)
Complete List of Grandmothers Whose Letters Are Profiled 267

Supplemental Materials

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The New copy of this book will include any supplemental materials advertised. Please check the title of the book to determine if it should include any access cards, study guides, lab manuals, CDs, etc.

The Used, Rental and eBook copies of this book are not guaranteed to include any supplemental materials. Typically, only the book itself is included. This is true even if the title states it includes any access cards, study guides, lab manuals, CDs, etc.

Excerpts

Chapter One

Life Is the Greatest of All Statements

How late we grow smart. To be honest, there were times when I thought I knew everything. However, after absorbing the letters contained within this passage, I found I knew nothing. And I am not alone. Millions of people blessed with the miracle of sight never really see the world. Millions with the innate capacity to love, and to know the joy that love brings, wait too long to express it. Too frequently, a visit to a nursing home will reveal the following: Patients who realize that their days are drawing to a close will often say, "I waited too long to start living." You should find their remarks strange. What they're really saying is that they failed to enjoy life even during those years that they were living it most fully. It's like the person who puts the best china and silverware away for some rare, special occasion. Unfortunately, these individuals die before it is ever used.

Few people, it seems, develop an awareness for living. While possessing the greatest gift--life itself--they pass through their days like robots. Even worse, their actions clearly demonstrate that they don't have the slightest idea of life's value, let alone an awareness that life is to be treasured and enjoyed each and every day. It's only when their days grow short and their hour draws near that life's precious value begins to take hold. I find it amazing, but most of us place the greatest value on the cheapest commodities--possessions, that if lost or stolen could easily be replaced--while the greatest gift of all goes unnoticed. The most fortunate people in the world are those who have been taught to place value where it belongs--on an awareness for living.

So if you are about to graduate from high school or college, consider these letters the homework assignment you failed to complete and the commencement speech you never heard. If you've grown weary of an uninspiring religion and find your spirit thirsting for renewal, here's the sermon you missed. If your parents failed to provide the loving guidance and sense of direction that is necessary for fulfillment in today's embattled world, here is the firm but tender heart-to-heart talk you should have received in your youth. At last your life and your future are in your hands--and yours alone. You now possess the power and the means to make all your tomorrows a special heaven on earth. You may now walk with head high and shoulders erect toward the future you deserve. Live your life well!

October 16, 1998, Glenmora, LA

What I learned about life and success in the cotton fields of Louisiana

Mother used to say, "You will hear me long after I am gone." The first time I heard these words I had no idea what she meant. When conveying the facts of life, my mother always spoke in parables and proverbs. This remarkable statement would be an important lesson that neither of us would verbalize during her lifetime. Now, fifty years have come and gone, and I realize she could not have taught me in a more excellent way. As I look back from my lofty perch in academia, sitting behind a mahogany desk in a high-back leather chair, surrounded by walls draped with citations, mementos, and diplomas, my hearing is as sharp as ever. I can only admire the wisdom and subtlety my mother displayed as she prepared me for the future. "You may not agree with all I've got to say, but sooner or later my words will ring true," was the message my mother was trying to convey.

In those days, I was as full of questions as my mother was of answers. A lesser individual would've knuckled under due to the stress and strain long ago, and certainly wouldn't have had the time to guide me. A pillar of strength, here stood a woman who could've easily been overwhelmed with the responsibilities of earning a living, caring for her children, and just plain keeping her head above water. Whoever said no one is irreplaceable never met my mother. Though she is no longer with me, her advice continues to make a difference in unexpected and unexplained ways.

Like those before me, I began picking cotton as a young girl growing up in Louisiana. I was barely twelve years old. Throughout my childhood, though money and means were rare commodities, hard work could be found in abundance. Now, I don't know if you've ever toiled in the cotton fields but Lord, have mercy, I can think of a thousand jobs--from washing clothes to cooking and cleaning, to sweating away in the cabbage patch, you name it--I'd rather do. I've lived and worked the world over and, if I never pick an ounce of cotton in my life again, that would be fine with me. Somehow my mother sensed my disdain. "There's more to picking cotton," she would say, "than just filling a sack. If you look hard and long enough you will find a lesson or two." There was little chance that I would live out my life in those hot and humid cotton fields of central Louisiana, but once again I would lean on my mother's words to pull me through.

The human journey is short. We no sooner realize that we are here than it is time for us to go. Though you may never lift a cotton sack in your life, I pray that you will appreciate and benefit from the pearls of wisdom I plucked from the cotton fields of Louisiana:

Lesson One: The workday began at 3 a.m. sharp, and concluded somewhere between 5 and 6 p.m. The foreman's truck that carried me and other workers to the fields came bright and early and expected each worker to be on time. At an early age I was taught the value of discipline: If I failed to show up at the appointed hour that workday would be rendered wasted. I soon discovered "on time" means on time and success in any endeavor begins early and stays late.

Lesson Two: Never expect something for nothing. At the conclusion of each workday, within full view of everyone, each sack of cotton was weighed. One large sack--a good day's effort--brought at least three dollars, money I desperately needed. But each sack had to be filled with clean, dry cotton. Though human nature might tempt one to cut corners (I've seen field hands throw rocks and dirt into their sacks in an effort to add to their total weight), eventually their shortcuts and deception were uncovered. Never look for or expect more than what you put in. Never expect easy money, success without working, or to get rich quick.

Lesson Three: I was raised in a rundown clapboard house. As I lay in bed each night I could see the evening stars through my roof and the chickens beneath the floor. I dared not complain. Mother was doing the best she could. The following morning, as I moved from row to row with that bag of cotton on my shoulders, I carried my dreams for a better world with me. I took an inward journey and unleashed the power of my mind. I pictured a home in an upscale neighborhood. A house complete with indoor plumbing, carpeted floors, freshly painted walls, topped off with a huge kitchen featuring the latest appliances. As my imagination ran wild I came to rely on a spiritual secret: Trust the unseen more than the visible. I may have never openly shared my dreams, but I knew this was the life I was meant to live. Now, in more ways than one, I finally feel at home. Today, I live in the house that I envisioned--complete with all the bells and whistles--down to the smallest detail. And to think I began laying the foundation nearly half a century ago. It is never too late to become the person you were meant to be. Let your imagination soar. It is the secret language of the soul.

Lesson Four: Truth be known, I wasn't the fastest cotton picker in the field. To be honest, not only was I the slowest, but my inability to develop a rhythm (yes, there is a rhythm to picking cotton) many times caused bottlenecks as I struggled from row to endless row. To my surprise the older workers didn't seem to mind. As a matter of fact, they overlooked my shortcomings and wrapped me in a blanket of encouragement. Collectively, they knew of my dreams of going to college, and eventually earning a graduate degree. To them, I represented faith and hope for the future. Not just my future, but the future for every overworked and underpaid brother and sister who slaved away in those fields. With my head down, and back and knees aching, I can still hear them leading me on: "Come on, Baby. You can do it! You're gonna make it." Their words of hope and redemption touched me in a healing way. Since the day I set foot on the Grambling State University campus to the day I walked across the stage at Texas Southern University to receive my doctorate degree, I have lived by this lesson. Like those field hands who had the utmost faith in me, their daily words of encouragement set the tone for all that I would accomplish. On a word and a prayer, I pressed on.

Well, my mother was right. "There's more to picking cotton than just filling a sack." It was my mother who not only pointed me to the cotton fields but who knew I would uncover a number of life-changing lessons as well. Within each of us blooms a wellspring of abundance and opportunity. For in each of us rests a deeply personal dream waiting to be plucked. When we cherish our dreams and invest in hard work, faith, and discipline, we will achieve long-lasting success.

I have faith that you will hear my words long after I am gone,

Doris Price, Ph.D.

September 10, 1998, Nashville, TN

To dare guide a life

Well, where do I start? The best advice I've been given rests on the following: Life is oh so precious. In that brief space of time between birth and death each of us discovers life's true meaning. My life has been enriched by the lives I've touched, shaped, and molded in more than forty years of teaching. It has been gratifying to see those whom I have taught discover their unique talents and gifts. My job was no less than that of my parents who had the daunting task of convincing me, though I couldn't eat at certain lunch counters or use public restrooms or participate in a system that overlooked my abilities that, in spite of it all the indignities and injustice, somehow, someway, I could still reach my goals. No small chore.

Only a few, if any, of the lives that I've embraced will approximate the discoveries of a George Washington Carver or the commitment and contributions of a Dr. King, a Booker T. Washington or a Harriet Tubman. Nonetheless, driven by a compulsion for success, many of my former students have blossomed into doctors, lawyers, corporate executives, and public servants. To dare guide a life and to help a young child discover his or her innate gifts is especially meaningful to me. This is the best way to put meaning into your life. The Man Above only asks that we begin.

Cora R. Goodwin

April 25, 2001, Baltimore, MD

A good book is your most treasured possession

The year was 1933--the bottom of the Great Depression. My father, born and raised in Barbados, came to this country with high hopes and even higher expectations. Though his entrepreneurial dreams fell short, my father was determined that his journey to America would not be in vain. After all, here was a man who had immigrated to the U.S. from Barbados at the turn of the century and immediately experienced a string of business failures. Here was a man who didn't think twice when faced with the prospects of risking his life to go abroad in order to feed his family. Before immigrating to the U.S., he took a job nearly one thousand miles away to work on the Panama Canal. Like thousands of ditch diggers who fought the jungle heat, disease-carrying mosquitoes, and the constant threat of landslides, he dug day and night until his blistered hands were nearly covered with blood. It's amazing what you'll do when responsibilities must be met. Years later he moved his family to Harlem and set his sights on the ministry. After my grandmother died from an insidious tuberculosis outbreak, my mother, a stately-looking woman from Jamaica, came to the U.S. with her God-mother through Ellis Island. Dedicated to educating her children, she took a job as a Gregg Shorthand stenographer for a small New York City law firm. Her earnings were meager but they enabled our survival.

Together, my parents had many endearing qualities--hard working, thrift, loyalty to each other, and high moral standards--not to mention their love of learning and books. My father ruled his roost with both an iron fist and a velvet glove. He was hell-bent on personal achievement. He had a thick, old leather strap that he judiciously applied whenever we willfully broke the rules. My brothers, sisters, and I were considered to be well mannered and, on numerous occasions, our parents were complimented as to our impeccable deportment. My fondest memories of my mother were our trips to the library where she made sure that her children had collected their share of positive reading material. I can still remember her reading to us from an old, dusty red book brought from her native land which profiled African kings and queens. If time permitted, she would shuffle us off to the Museum of Natural History where our little inquisitive minds would run wild. We were also regulars at the Schomburg Library on 135th Street and Lenox, and even took picnics at Grant's Tomb overlooking the Hudson. On Sunday afternoons after church, in Carnegie Hall, our entire family could usually be found in the front row listening to the classical music of Chopin or Grieg, or pondering the words of great orators or inspiring poets of the day who happened to be in the area, leaving an even bigger imprint on our lives. This was the era of the Harlem Renaissance during which intellectual giants like Countee Cullen, Langston Hughes, and Paul Lawrence Dunbar filled many auditoriums and churches. Few can remember that in 1951 W. E. B. Du Bois, the famed educator and activist, ran for the New York Senate seat as a third-party candidate. Father insisted that I work on Dr. Du Bois' campaign.


From the Hardcover edition.

Excerpted from What Keeps Me Standing: Letters from Black Grandmothers on Peace, Hope and Inspiration by Dennis Kimbro
All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.

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