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A perfect summer day - like this one at age five - could last you forever if you started it early enough.
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Tina Knowles (Matriarch: A Memoir)
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Anyone who’s worked at a nonprofit knows you do ten jobs and there’s still more to do.
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Tina Knowles (Matriarch: Oprah's Book Club: A Memoir)
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it was going to be a place that let a little Black girl know that she was beautiful. Not beautiful “too”—there was no need to factor in a certain criterion of beauty that centered whiteness. The pride should be based solely on her own self. Black is beautiful.
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Tina Knowles (Matriarch: Oprah's Book Club: A Memoir)
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From my first breath, I was told, shown, and embraced into knowing that it is an honor to be a Black person.
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Tina Knowles (Matriarch: Oprah's Book Club: A Memoir)
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Let me just talk, nothing’s wrong except how I’ve treated you. You’ve been the best mom in the world to me. Me? I’m just an idiot, you know. I’m looking at these other people’s moms and I’m like, God, I didn’t even know moms like that existed. And here I have you and I’m sorry.
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Tina Knowles (Matriarch: Oprah's Book Club: A Memoir)
Tina Knowles (Matriarch: Oprah's Book Club: A Memoir)
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All the way back from when I was a little kid, I would let myself have a good cry and then say to myself, “Okay, suck it up and keep it moving.” That approach worked for me for a long time. I couldn’t know how this only meant I stored the trauma in my body—stashed it in my mind and heart to lie in wait. Keep it moving, I said. So I moved.
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Tina Knowles (Matriarch: A Memoir)
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But one of the ways racism works is erasure. They didn't want us to know our history because they were afraid of our futures.
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Tina Knowles (Matriarch: A Memoir)
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If I met me, I would want to date me. If I met me, I would want to be my friend. I would like me. Now, I just have to meet me.
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Tina Knowles (Matriarch: A Memoir)
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Dividing attention, food, money—all that care—into equal parts. The algebra of motherhood.
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Tina Knowles (Matriarch: Oprah's Book Club: A Memoir)
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whether it’s a hair salon or a record label—and instead of changing yourself to become someone’s idea of a “boss” you can remain who you are as success brings new challenges and goals. In the way that all of my daughters smartly refused to change who they were in order to be successful, Beyoncé could become more herself as the boss.
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Tina Knowles (Matriarch: Oprah's Book Club: A Memoir)