Oprah Writes a Letter to Her 19-Year-Old Self!
The letter which the billionaire media mogul wrote to her 19-year-old
self, a teenager she calls - 'beautiful brown-skinned girl', can be
found inside next month’s ‘O’ magazine.
Dear beautiful brown-skinned girl,
I look into your eyes and see the light and hope of myself.
In this photo you are just about to turn 20, posing outside the
television station where you were recently hired as a reporter. You’re
proud of yourself for getting the job, but uncertain you’ll be able to
manage all your college classes before 1 and arrive at the station by
1:30 for a full day’s work. Even so, your biggest concern is how to
manage your love life with Bubba. Yes, you are dating someone named
Bubba.
On this day you’ve brought him to the station to see where
you work, hoping he’ll be proud, too. He seems less than impressed. The
truth is, he’s intimidated. You don’t know this, though, because you
can see yourself only through his eyes. A lesson you will have to learn
again and again: to see yourself with your own eyes, to love yourself
from your own heart.
You’ve spent too many days and years trying to please others and be
what they wanted you to be. You will have to learn that the wounds of
your past—rape, molestation, whippings for “stepping out of place,” and
not being allowed to show anger or cry afterward—damaged your
self-esteem. Yet through it all, you’ve held on to a belief in God and
God’s belief in you.
That will be your single greatest gift: knowing there is a power greater than yourself and trusting that Force to guide you.
The trajectory of your life changed the day you answered the call from
Chris Clark, the news director at WLAC-TV. Your response was ignited by
the words of your then-favorite Bible verse, Philippians 3:14. “I
press toward the mark for the prize of the high calling of God in
Christ Jesus.”
Knowing there is a “high calling” is what will sustain and fulfill you.
From where I sit now, viewing your journey, there are few regrets. Only
months before this picture was taken, you wrote a poem about a “woman
becoming.” Even then you understood that success was a process and that
moving with the flow of life and not against it would be your greatest
achievement.
Love you deeply,
Oprah
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