Tuesday, January 10, 2017

7 Sisterhood Lessons from Hidden Figures, America's #1 Movie

Critics agree Hidden Figures is 
"ASTONISHING!" 
"A TRIUMPH!" 
"An inspiring, family-friendly historical drama."

It is all this and MORE.

Last Sunday, I found myself with a writing sister waiting for the movie previews to finish. Little did I expect while watching Hidden Figures for two hours that I would find myself engaged with and connected to strangers as we clapped and cheered together many times! I felt ONENESS.

I can't remember the last time this happened at a movie.
Can you?

It's been a long time.

The film is based on the book Hidden Figures: The American Dream and the Untold Story of the Black Women Mathematicians Who Helped Win the Space Race by Margot Lee Shetterly. Set in the Jim Crow deep south of 1962, Shetterly masterfully weaves a story of black sisterhood between Katherine Johnson, Mary Jackson, and Dorothy Vaughan. 

The surprise setting unfolds at the NASA research center in Langley, VA, where the three women work. It was the time of Cold War America and we were engaged in intense competition with Russia for space dominance. On everyone's mind loomed the ultimate question: Who would land on the moon first? 

Johnson, Jackson, and Vaughan played pivotal NASA roles as "colored computers" to calculate and formulate before IBM became a part of America's infrastructure for business and government.

This is the movie America needs right now.


Author  Margot Lee Shetterly

Here are seven lessons from this black sisterhood that inspire hope, inspiration, and collaboration:

From author Margot Lee Shetterly:
1) "Katherine Johnson knew: once you took the first step, anything was possible."
Sisterhood Lesson: Take the first step regardless of being told you can't or shouldn't. If Katherine hadn't taken that first step, America might not have been the first to land on the moon. She was called on in 1962 to manually verify the computer's numbers because John Glenn asked for her personally; he refused to fly unless she verified the calculations.

2) "Their dark skin, their gender, their economic status--none of those were acceptable excuses for not giving the fullest rein to their imaginations and ambitions." 
Sisterhood Lesson: Remind yourself, "What people think of me is none of my business." The three friends embodied this message and distinguished themselves despite constant obstacles: a NASA building carries Johnson's name and she received the National Medal of Honor in 2015; Jackson became the first African-American woman engineer at NASA and; Vaughan was promoted as the first African-American woman to serve as a head of NASA personnel.
L-r Katherine Johnson, Mary Jackson and Dorothy Vaughan

From Al Harrison, leader of the NASA Space Task Group played by Kevin Costner:
3) "Find the genius among the geniuses."  
Sisterhood Lesson: Look for brilliance in unexpected places, even when it seems everyone is shining; there's always someone with an even brighter light you can learn from!

4) "We all get there (outer space) together or we don get there at all."  
Sisterhood Lesson: A reminder of the classic acronym for TEAM: Together Everyone Achieves More! Think of ways how you can unite instead of dividing. Collaborate instead of separating. Compliment instead of judging. Appreciate instead of denigrating.

From others:
5) "They did not complain. They just got up every day and fought the good fight." -Taraji P. Henson who played Katherine Johnson
Sisterhood Lesson: Stop complaining. It's wasted energy and serves nothing and no one. Start doing and being what you believe in every day, not tomorrow or some day. 
Now.

6) "The film is important because sisterhood is important." -Janelle Monae who played Mary Jackson
Sisterhood Lesson: A new way of working and being is replacing the old way. Become a part of a sisterhood! Everywhere the global sisterhood is being called into the spotlight as a collective force for the collective good. Katherine, Mary, and Dorothy's story remind us of what is possible!


President Obama presented the Medal of Honor to Katherine G. Johnson, November 24, 2015
7) "Well, I was just doing my job." - Katherine G. Johnson, 99, the only one still living of the three friends. She was honored with the National Medal of Freedom in 2015.
Sisterhood Lesson: You and I have a job to do. We came here with a purpose. It's time to align with your true purpose and take inspired action. You and I are the ones the world's been waiting for. There's a job to do.

Again, this is the movie of many sisterhood lessons that America needs to embrace right now to fly high!

Which lesson spoke to you? 
Thank you in advance for commenting, sharing, and/or Tweeting if this spoke to you.

P.S.  Is your job to now share your message with the world? Your invitation is waiting for you to join me at the Treasure Island Beach Writer's Retreat: Recharge Your Body, Mind & Creative Soul, April 23-28. ** Early pricing closes on January 23.**


Copyright Lore Raymond, 2017. No portion of the blog post or information on this site may be reprinted, re-used or copied to another site without prior written permission from the author.

26 comments:

  1. You and I have a job to do. We came here with a purpose. It's time to align with your true purpose and take inspired action. You and I are the ones the world's been waiting for. There's a job to do. was the lesson that spoke to- doing what i am here to do look forward to seeing the movie :) All the lessons are important Lore xx

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    1. Thanks for letting me know which success lesson touched you, Suzie. xo

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  2. Your review gave me goosebumps. As a trained historian, this is one book and one movie I must read and see. I wrote my thesis on America's Race for Space. Their story is f*#4ing amazing.

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    1. WOW! You always continue to surprise me Peggy! Thanks for your two thumbs up! Means a lot. I am ready to see it again...it is THAT GREAT. Thanks also for sharing it to your page.

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  3. Now you made me want to see the movie. Great list. :)

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    1. Thanks for the compliment! It is over the moon GREAT!

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  4. Great "sisterhood" lessons. Haven't seen the movie, but inspired by them (and you)! Thanks so much for this post.

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    1. My pleasure to share...and thanks for the kind words, Val.

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  5. Can't wait toes the movie! Thank you!

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    1. Great, Lira! And you're welcome. It was fun writing it.

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  6. Can't wait to see the movie and read the book!

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  7. Awesome, Lore! So inspiring - tanks so much for sharing. Wish I could have been there with you and Linda!

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    1. Ahhh, how fun would that have been, Reba, had you joined us! Have you seen the movie yet?

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  8. Thank you Lore! I would like to publish in this year my Journey of Persephone - Women from shadows to the Light, anthology. It seems, this film needs to me. I just watch the Trailer, and I love it :)

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    1. Happy you checked it out, Theresia! Sounds like their story is a great fit for your anthology. I want to hear more about it as well. xoxox Hugs.

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  9. Excellent post Lore. You have inspired me to see the film! This is my fave take-away - #4 TEAM: Together Everyone Achieves More! Think of ways how you can unite instead of dividing. Collaborate instead of separating. Compliment instead of judging. Appreciate instead of denigrating. Cheers to the movies! :-)

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  10. Thanks. Debra! Happy you enjoyed the TEAM acronymn.

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  11. Hi Lore! Definitely a movie on my "must watch soon" list - especially now after reading your blog post. Thank you for sharing! xoxo

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  12. I love love love this review of the movie and your beautiful sisterhood lessons. Gave me chills. I agree with every lesson here. Sisterhood has the collective energy to over throw any and all negativity.
    Thank you for this inspiring post Lore. I appreciate you SO much.
    xoxo, Z~

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  13. Wow Lore, I didn't know about this movie! what a great review! So many beautiful lessons that you shared with us! And I love this: "You and I have a job to do. We came here with a purpose". Heck yes! That's why I love doing what I do! Xo

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  14. Where in the book can I find the second quote?

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  15. Wow, cool post. I'd like to write like this too - taking time and real hard work to make a great article... but I put things off too much and never seem to get started. Thanks though. job search websites

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