Skip to main content

Amelie and Me

When I was a kid, I wanted to be Nancy Duncan when I grew up.


I didn’t want to be LIKE HER, I wanted to BE her.


She was my hero.


And it is because of her that I know to call her a hero (and not a heroine).


You see, Nancy Duncan was the first feminist I ever met.


Of course, I didn’t know it at the time.  It was around 1976, which would make me 10 years old, and I was smack dab in the middle of the Midwest in Omaha, Nebraska.  Nancy Duncan was my theatre teacher, my director, and (like I mentioned), my hero.


Everything about her was perfect in my eyes.  Her wavy, messy hair.  Her loud laugh.  Her funky, multi-layered clothing.  Her smile.  Her genuine way of caring for those around her.  Her wit.  And her kindness. 


I was just one of hundreds (thousands?) of kids she taught and directed.  I am sure nothing stood out about me that made me special in her eyes.  But in my eyes, oh in my eyes, Nancy Duncan was who I wanted to be when I grew up.


Fast forward to 2001.  That is the year that I “met” Amelie.


From the moment the lights went down in the movie theatre, I was enthralled by her.  She was everything I wanted to be!  I felt some kind of connection to the character, but when I mentally compared myself to her, I knew I fell very short.  Amelie, to me, was perfection.


She was quirky.  She was smart.  She was funny.  She was clever.  She was imaginative – oh was she imaginative.  She was attentive.  She was beautiful, but not in the traditional sense.  And she lived her life, dull as though it may seem in other people’s eyes, to the fullest.  She filled her life with art and music and adventure and mystery.


I wanted to be Amelie when I grew up.  Just as when I was 10 and dreaming of being Nancy Duncan when I grew up, I wanted to be Amelie.  I didn’t want to be like them, somehow I wanted to be them.


Fast forward to 2024. 



By some strange twist of fate - I am Amelie.  I am Nancy Duncan.


I never grew up – I decided that I didn’t want to take that path, too much responsibility there.


But I became ME. 


A me that incorporates many traits of my heroes.  Yet, is uniquely ME.


I laugh (a bit too loud at times, and sometimes at inopportune moments).

I try my hardest to be a feminist and demonstrate those qualities to the girls who I speak with.

I pay attention to details – I see and value things that many people miss…  (And yet in doing so, I sometimes miss the big picture, the part that most people see, which is a-ok with me…)

I love a mystery.

I wear what I want, style be damned.

I use my imagination and give it a work-out often.

I am caring.

I am kind.

I am quirky. 


And I am happy.


Sure, I have my down times, and as I have matured I have learned to not only weather through those, but to take what I can learn from them, too. 


I like who I have become.  I am even learning to like the physical messes that seem to follow me wherever I go.


I am grateful.  It takes some people a lifetime to come to terms with who and what they are, if ever.  I like to think I have lots of years left to explore myself and the world around me.


Thanks Nancy Duncan.  And thanks Amelie. 


I am uniquely me, and I love it.


May we all be the role models those around us need to see.  


P.S. - Special thanks to my partner David for surprising me with tickets to see the re-release of "Amelie" on the big screen!  

Comments

Anonymous said…
A Beautiful story! The world needs more kind, caring, and fun-loving (quirky) people like you; because without... Well? The world wouldn't be as fun & colorful!

Popular posts from this blog

We Ride At Dawn

I can’t be the only one feeling down. And stressed. And nervous. And angry. And confused. And just about every other negative emotion that could be listed. There is just so much ANGST in the world right now, especially with the upcoming elections in the US.   And sometimes (at least for deep feelers like myself) it just feels like a little too much to bear. But then I get a reminder. A reminder that even in the midst of all of these sleepless nights and fret – there IS good in the world. I got 2 reminders recently, and I thought I should share them in case you haven’t had any.   I don’t know, I guess with the hopes that the reminders I came across will help boost your spirits a bit, too. Here’s the first one. This hat. We came home the other day and this was hanging on our front doorknob.   Now, we have had a LOT of things left on our porch over the years – rusty cans of soup, brand new snow boots, and everything in between – ...

The Girl Who Can't Ride a Bike

I am “the girl who can’t ride a bike”. I guess to be accurate, I should say that I WAS “the girl who can’t ride a bike”.   But it was such a big part of my identity growing up, that the never formalized (but often teased about) nickname stuck in my psyche. You know how most kids love to jump on their bikes and pedal around the neighborhood once they have figured out how to balance, brake, and GO?   Yeah, that wasn’t me.   I wasn’t that kid. I am not sure WHAT really happened. The one thing I do remember is being on a bike in my family’s garage in Omaha, Nebraska trying to ride my bike.   It must’ve been winter, otherwise, why wouldn’t I have been outdoors??   But I think my foot slipped off the pedal and I know for sure my knee hit the handlebar.   It hurt.   I remember crying. But I am guessing that it hurt my pride more than it hurt my knee.   I think I was already past the age where kids were “supposed” to ride a bike. ...

The Presents

We are old. Giving gifts has always meant a lot to me.  I was raised in a household that valued gifts, valued “things” actually.  At Christmas time, the base of our tree would be piled hiiiigh with presents wrapped in brightly colored paper tied with neatly curled ribbons.    Birthdays would mean being spoiled by more gifts.   Even Valentine’s Day came with a present.   So, without being overtly taught, I learned that love was shown by giving something tangible.   As I became an adult, I noticed people older than me asking for things for the holidays that I thought were silly – cheese, wine, nuts…   “Those aren’t PRESENTS,” I remember thinking. “Presents are touchable, physical things – things to be KEPT, not to be consumed.”   So, when I found my life partner, I showered him with GIFTS.   Gifts wrapped just as I had been subconsciously taught must be wrapped in beautiful paper, tied tight with a bow.   But...