Women we admire

More Than Words Volume 4 You might meet them at the coffee shop, the grocery store, or walking down the street. They're women across North America committed to reaching out and changing lives one good deed at a time. Five of these exceptional women have been selected as this year's recipients of Harlequin's More Than Words award. And once again five New York Times and USA TODAY bestselling authors have kindly offered their creativity to write original short stories inspired by these real-life heroines.

We hope More Than Words will touch your heart and inspire the heroine living inside you. I had the opportunity to meet the women honored this year in a lovely celebration in Toronto, and of course got all teary as I listened to these remarkable ladies describe thier charitable work and introduce some of the recipients of their programs.  I was inspired and moved by their courage and heart. Tell us about the women who inspire YOU!

I'm thinking, here...

and have to ponder this and how I want to write it without crying myself. But, what's more important is that I'm waiting to hear from you. Who inspires you. So come on, jump in with both feet and get wet. The water in here is warm.

Rae

My inspiration

I have many, but I have to say that above all, Oprah inspires me, she's accomplished so much despite a difficult start but has stuck to her vision of what is right and is so down to earth and natural with all of her success.  I wish that everyone used the pay it forward gene to make the world a better place the way she tries to.  Because of people like her, I think the world thinks that maybe a better place is possible..  I do like that she's not exclusionary...you don't have to be anyone but who you are and the best you can be to emulate her.

Jayne 

Community Manager
"We cannot really love anybody with whom we never laugh"—Agnes Repplier

One of My Inspirations

Much like Jayne, I have many women I admire and who have inspired me over the years. Some are famous, but the majority of them are every day women doing extraordinary things.

My Grandma H. is one of them. She passed away a couple of years ago and I miss her every day. A simple woman, she had a hard life. Her mother died when she was young and her step-mother was only a few years older than her. She married, and her husband was abusive and an alcoholic, but she never let that stop her. I came into her family via marriage, but she never made me feel like I didn't belong. She treated me equally and she taught me the value of not being a sore loser when it came to cards and other games. She also taught me about the true meaning of dignity. Because no matter what was happening in her life, she held her head high and always managed to smile. She survived the depression, recessions and wars. She wasn't a wealthy woman or a powerful woman. But what she had was something so much more. She was rich in her words, in her love for her family and she was a genius when it came to stretching the value of a dollar.

She knew that money most certainly did not buy hapiness and she taught us how to be happy or how to make do without it. She made the best Ham salad, pickled eggs and peanut butter toast.

She rarely complained--and she didn't when ovarian cancer spread throughout her body at the age of eighty-six. Even in her last few days of death, she was worried about us. It was never about her.

Rae

Dort

I have friends who have less-than great mother-in-laws, and I'll confess, I feel so bad for them, because my mother-in-law, Dort was one of my best friends.  And she certainly qualifies as a woman I admire. 

She came from a large, hard-working Irish family.  She married, had three kids.  When her youngest was in school, Dort went to college and became a teacher.  My older kids were lucky enough to have their grandmother as a teacher.  But they were even luckier to have her as a grandmother.  She was everything a grandma should be.  She came to all their events, both sporting and school, and pretty much thought every one of them was fantastic.

Dort and I used to tease my dh that if the two of us divorced, I was keeping her in the settlement!  LOL  We had season tickets to the local Broadway series.  And when my oldes graduated high school, the only thing she wanted was to do the school's New York trip with me...and Dort. The three of us running amuck in NYC...it was quite the time.  Our last day there, it rained cats and dogs, but whenever we asked Dort if she'd had enough, she'd just smile and assure us she was still good to go.

 I would have loved her for just raising such a great son (my dh) and for being so good to my kids, but Dort was more than that.  She was the first person to offer to help someone if they needed it.  She had an infectuous laugh.  She was the family storykeeper, giving her family a gift of the past.  She was...well, she was Dort.

We lost her in '04 to breast cancer, and still miss her in our lives.  Even as that horrible disease stole her from us, she kept her sense of humor and her sense of joy. 

There are so many people I admire in an abstract  way...people I've never met, but whose lives have touched me.  But Dort was real...she was admired by everyone who knew her...and she is missed.

 Holly

www.HollyJacobs.com, RT Reviewers' Choice Award for The House on Briar Hill Road
SAME TIME NEXT SUMMER, Superromance, 8/08
EVERYTHING BUT A BRIDE, 8/08
ONCE UPON A THANKSGIVING, American Romance, 10/08
ONCE UPON A CHRISTMAS, American Romance, 12/08

still here

Innocenti have to admit that I admire a lot of women. most of them ordinary...my mom is one of the first. She was born in 1934. She survived the Depression, married a man who was Native American in spite of her family's objection, served in the WAC, lost my dad at 32, raised the four of us, worked as one of the first women in a paper mill, and managed to overcome/deal with alcoholism for the past 15 years. she is still alive and vibrant, living in Las Vegas, after having a vulvanectomy last summer. She is 75 years young/

 

I work in an inner city school in new york state (but not nyc) where I see ordinary women return to work each day to give their best to children who need role models to be successful in the world they don't come from...women who teach, and nurture, and rise above the media line that says teachers are the reason children in inner cities aren't suceeding.

 

so there are lots of women to admire out here...

ever searching...getting there one step at a time lulu

I admire so many women in my

I admire so many women in my family that are true inspirations.  As for public figures, of course Mother Teresa comes to mind.  I also rather liked Margaret Thatcher.  I think she had some real spunk to take on the PM job.  Whether or not you agree politically, you have to respect women who enter the public political arena. Laughing

My Mom is the most amazing woman...

My mom was a housewife with two small children in the late 60's, whose husband drank away her home, two businesses and an accustomed lifestyle. She had never worked outside of her home. When my father left, so did her friends. With no income and rent two months behind, my mom went out and got a job in a grocery store. In a short time she became an assistant manager of the deli department. Within a year, she was the first female manager in the chain. Money was tight and but she never complained about the hours she had to work. She taught me and my brother that sometimes we needed to sacrifice for each other. One week there would be enough to buy shoes or clothes for one or the other, but rarely both. As a result of her hard work, we learned strong values.

At the age of 33, my brother died of a brain tumor. And while no parent should ever outlive a child, my mother shows a strength I never knew her capable of. She has grace and class. She never rails or complains. She is not bitter or angry. She believes and lives in the Lord's grace. Not a preacher or church crazy. She has accepted her life and lives it one day at a time. She finds the best in every situation and looks for the best in those around her.

At 62, she went back to college and got her degree in Children's Psychology specializing in Children with Special Needs.

At 71, my mom continues to be active, a red hatter, volunteer dance teacher at the seniors gym, feeds the neighbors. I can't tell you how proud of her I am. I aspire to be like her.

RE: WOMEN WE ADMIRE

It may sound corny -- or perhaps it's the pat answer from a male of the human pursuasion -- I don't lnow for sure.  The Woman I admire most is me Mother.  She and Pad married in the Priest's office as they couldn't afford the sanctuary, and the 'wedding dinner" was kool-aid and Grocery store cake -- but yet they were married 53 years!  They'd still be married now if me Mum hadn't died.  Mum took in other's little ones, laundry, and Ironing to make ends meet -- while Daddy worked on cars and drove a Potato Chip truck.  Mum wasn't like mummy's of today, but Mum would wear the same winter coat for three or four seasons, and the same for her shoes so she'd have some dollars to get clothes her kids would look good in at school.

~~ I Love You, Mum ~~

"I went to a FIGHT the other night...and a HOCKEY GAME broke out!! "
HockeyDET@comcast.net

Not Corny at all

I don't think you were being corny at all. I love reading these stories.

Rae

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