When we mourn the death of Dr. Maya Angelow, we celebrate her life, her contribution, and the wisdom she shares with the world. She is a poet, writer, teacher, historian, activist, leader, and leader who teaches the meaning of living and leads you in every aspect of life.
I have never seen her, but I have experienced the light and love she had in the world and brought to the world. I am also fortunate to know a few diverse officials who understand and respect her deeply.
Maya Angelo is very impressed with me, I think that most people are her credibility. It was her credibility and the wisdom she shared that made her such a beautiful leader. In a world that is occasionally unreasonably filled, she is often a rational voice. As a leader, we can learn from people who insist on their beliefs with elegance, dignity and courage.
Probably the best way to celebrate her life is to respect her heritage. There is nothing to lead beyond what I first cited my leaders' philosophy. However, all of these references and many other references have experience and inspiration.
"People forget what you said, people will forget what you did, but people understand that you will never forget how they felt."
"Travel may not be able to stop prejudice, but if you try to understand each other by proveing everyone who is crying, laughing, eating, worried, or dying friends You can bring in the idea that it may be. "
"Prejudice is a burden that confuses the past, threatens the future, and impossible to enter now."
"I already know that you should not use your two-handed catcher's gloves to end your life; you need to be able to throw away something."
Leaders are always responsible for stiff data such as sales, profits, market shares. Maya Angelou reminds us that credibility, courage, and inner leadership make it all worth it. She will be forgotten
Darlene Slaughter is Linkage's Chief Consultant. She leads the progress in the field of linkage's comprehensive leadership and women's leadership practice. She is also the chairman of the association's diversity and linkage laboratory of inclusive research. Prior to joining Linkage, Danny was vice president and chief diversity officer of Fannie Mae. Contact her at LinkedIn
Maya Angelou Life experience at graduation ceremony We experienced a lot of stepping stones Maya Angelou's autobiographical essay "graduation" is not just entering another grade. Due to the accident that occurred during the ceremony, she graduated from a child's point of view, became a more experienced and sometimes distracting viewpoint for adults. - God has removed Eve from human ribs as a reminder that women are equal and help others. Backed by the development of society and the superiority of humanity, women occupy the rear seats and are responding to every whim without being properly recognized. Citizenship became a hot topic in the 1950s. For the changing world, it is also an atrocity to see black men who were once slaves. Black skin color is stain of your personality. Women adding colored skin, in particular, make life unbearable
Pain in Maya Angelou's life Margaret Anne Johnson, commonly known as Maya Angelou, was born in St. Louis, Missouri on April 4, 1928. She is also a famous African-American poet, novelist, playwright who worked during civil rights. "Angelou has been highly regarded as a woman of the Renaissance era and is regarded as one of the great voices of contemporary literature" (Www.mayaangelou.com). She is also a civil rights activist. - Maya Angelou was raped by her mother's boyfriend, dropped out of high school, became a teenage mother, and treated racial discrimination often. Who would have thought that one day I experienced so many things would become confident and inspiring women? Maya Angelow has confidence in herself and her poetry of African-Americans has ethnicity, giving others the courage to speak for themselves.