• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
  • Home
  • About
    • Say ‘Hello’!
    • Patreon
    • podcast
  • Portfolio
  • Blog
  • Book
  • shop
  • Secondary Navigation Social Media Icons

    • Email
    • Facebook
    • Instagram
    • Pinterest
Jenny Williams

Jenny Williams

  • Home
  • About
    • Say ‘Hello’!
    • Patreon
    • podcast
  • Portfolio
  • Blog
  • Book
  • shop

Are YOU a heroine?

Mar. 16, 2024

I have a question for you, reader: are you a heroine?

Is a heroine (or hero) someone who accomplishes a great feat? Who conquers a great fault? Saves someone’s life?

I think that’s often how I think of “a heroine”. And yet, if I look at my own life, I don’t think of myself as someone who has had any really great victory.

Small victories, absolutely.

Sometimes I sit down to a blank piece of paper even when I’m afraid, uninspired, or tired.

(And of course other times I avoid blank pieces of paper like the plague. What might they reveal to me about who I really am?!)

I’ve faced faults in myself I tried to hide from for years.

I’ve cleaned the kitchen when all I wanted to do was plop on the couch. 

I taught my daughter how to read.

These are all accomplishments I am proud of, but they don’t feel like the victories heroine journeys are made of.

Who would read a book about my heroine journey?

But then I remember Beth March. Beth March, who speaks few words and moves slowly through life (indeed she seems to spend a great deal of her life sitting down).

Is Beth less of a heroine than Jo, who goes after what she wants with grit and force?

But I ask you, which is easier: accepting your fate to die young, or trying to prove your worth as a writer?

I think this is a big reason why Jo and Beth have such a deep bond in Little Women: Jo sees Beth for the heroine that she is.

Jo sees Beth’s quiet determination that doesn’t seek the approval of others, her resolve to accept what she cannot change, and she knows deep down that Beth is further along in her heroine journey than she is.

While Jo has a burning need to accomplish a great victory in her life, Beth seeks the quieter path of conquering the small daily battles right in front of her.

To Jo, a headstrong girl, this is baffling, and yet admirable.

Now, there is no one way to “heroine”. Jo and Beth are both heroines in their own right. While I’d argue that Beth is further along in her journey (she has conquered more personal battles than Jo), heroism is not a contest. 

Jo and Beth are both heroines.

The greatness of your deeds, the number of your virtues — those don’t determine your status as a heroine.

So what does?

No matter what kind of heroine you are, you are a heroine if you haven’t quit.

Pausing, resting, falling down, stomping your foot: these are all ways to stop for a moment. But unless you refuse to move from that sticking spot until the day you die … you are still a heroine.

Grief, despair, anger, blindness, ignorance, making a colossal mistake … these are all part of a heroine’s journey.

It’s what one does with those things (faces them or gives up) that determines whether or not she is a heroine.

So then, it’s not what you do that defines you as a heroine.

It’s really quite simple:

If you get up when you fall down, you are a heroine.

Whether you are more of a Jo or a Beth — whether you battle your anger and impatience on a daily basis or you must strive for contentment when the world seems to be falling around you –both types can learn a lot about heroism from the other.

The important thing is, you’ve answered the call of transformation, whatever that may require of you. You’ve chosen the heroine path and all you must do now is put one foot in front of the other. If you trip and fall, which you will do from time to time, get back up.

You can face whatever lies ahead with courage.

Whether you feel very heroic today or not, take heart, heroine: You have nothing to prove, you have only to keep going!

To quote Marmee, “Courage, dear soul! There is always light behind the clouds.”

Category: Literary Heroines, Little Women, The Heroine Journey Tags: jo and beth, literary heroines, little women, louisa may alcott, the difference between Jo March and Beth March, what is a heroine, who is a heroine, why does beth die in little women

← Previous Post
The Pages of Spring
Next Post →
Are You a Seed? Part I

You may also like

If Your Story Had a Cover …

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Jess says

    March 19, 2024 at 3:13 am

    Thank you for writing this! I needed this for myself and a friend! <3

    • Jenny says

      June 7, 2024 at 11:17 pm

      I’m so glad to hear that, Jess. Thank you for reading!

Primary Sidebar

Welcome!

I’m so glad you’re here. I’m Jenny Williams, artist, author, and creator of Carrot Top Paper Shop: an online gift shop for book lovers and kindred spirits. I am passionate about nurturing creativity and approaching every area of life with a heroine mindset. Make yourself comfortable, won’t you? And I’ll pour you a glass of “raspberry cordial” …

My episode on @megsreadingroom came out today and My episode on @megsreadingroom came out today and in honor of the occasion, I’d love to give away a copy of Eat Like a Heroine to one of you!

To enter, simply leave a comment below sharing a literary heroine who has impacted you, or tag a friend you think would like Eat Like a Heroine. (The more comments, the more entries!)

Be sure to check out Meg’s podcast for delightful bookish interviews that will help you discover your next heartwarming read! 

I loved talking to Meg about what it means to Eat Like a Heroine, the impact of American Girl on the Millennial psyche, and a little about the power of the Heroine Journey … and my next book. Thanks again, @megsreadingroom! 💗(photo credit: @megsreadingroom)
The kindred spirit club sticker is ✨ in stock ✨. (Along with many other Anne themed stickers. 👒)

And do you know what else? Many more stickers are headed your way in the GOOD NEWS Collection coming soon! 

The best way to stay in touch/receive the latest shop news is to join my email list (also called The Kindred Spirit Club!). Use the link in my bio to sign up, and you’ll get all the details for my upcoming collection, as well as discount codes and sale alerts. 🥳
“Do you ever feel like your creativity died when “Do you ever feel like your creativity died when your adult responsibilities took over?

This is a topic that comes up occasionally among my friends who are raising young children. 

It sometimes feels like there’s just no time, or energy, to explore creative habits, old or new.

While it’s true that seasons ebb and flow with regard to creativity, it’s important to mentally put dry seasons in their place:

your creativity has not died. It has either taken other forms, or is simply lying dormant (which, just as in nature, is not a bad thing).”

Read the full post on my blog, and tell me what creative season you are in, in the comments. Wherever you are, I am cheering you on! (Link in bio.)
🎶 This is no ordinary day. The birds are chirpi 🎶 This is no ordinary day. The birds are chirping in their usual way. 🎶 

After I shared my last post about the chorus of birds I’ve been tuning into, and how the habit tends to realign my perspective to reality …

I thought it would be fun to record a song for you. 🎹 (find the link in my bio.)

✏️I wrote this song, called Kaleidoscope View, 17 years ago, in college, and played it at many-an-open mic night/Starbucks, but since then, I just play my songs at home.

🐦’Birds’ are a theme that popped up a lot in my songwriting in my early twenties, and it’s been cropping up again lately in my current projects.

Are you, too, comforted by the sound of the birds’ songs? I think they are very wise.

And as I said in my last blog, I love pondering what the “lyrics” may really be.

This song is an extension of that wondering … I hope you enjoy it!
I love the way @anniebjones05 talks about how stay I love the way @anniebjones05 talks about how staying put doesn’t have to mean settling, lack of courage, or any other negative connotation.

Staying can also mean contentment, loyalty, making adventure out of little things ... groundedness.

For a long time I hadn’t really thought of myself as a “person who stays” geographically, which is ironic coming from someone who lives a few miles from where she grew up.

After college I did move away to begin my own grand adventure: to Washington, D.C. to pursue a career in politics (I thought perhaps in speech writing), and after five years, moved back to my home state of Oklahoma.

As time goes on, that five year window becomes a smaller and smaller percentage of my life. 

And I find myself relating to much of Annie’s story (which may be quiet, but is certainly an adventure!).

I am thoroughly enjoying Annie’s debut book, Ordinary Time, and I’m not surprised at all that she could make me see something right in front of my face with fresh eyes and a new perspective. 

I have always loved the way Annie sees the world, and her book is an adventurous deep dive into all the unusual ways in which we can discover surprises hiding in our own versions of “commonplace”.

Have you read Ordinary Time yet? 

(On my blog this week, I share a couple of favorite fiction books that celebrate the quiet adventure that can come from staying put with purpose. Share any of your favorites below!)
“If I told a child fearsome tales about ferociou “If I told a child fearsome tales about ferocious lions, the jaws of deep sea creatures, and snakes that lie in wait to strangle their prey … but I left out the chorus of birds … I wouldn’t necessarily be lying about nature, but it certainly wouldn’t give her an accurate picture of it, would it?”

On my blog today I’m sharing ten fiction books that sing in harmony with the chorus of birds. 

The reality that informs their song is the same one hidden in these books. And reading them is an invitation to become more rooted in that same truth ...

What’s a fiction book you love that makes you feel more grounded?

Footer

Join the Kindred Spirit Club

Join my email list for book news, shop updates, secret sales, and fun freebies in your inbox.

  • Email
  • Facebook
  • Goodreads
  • Instagram
  • Pinterest

Copyright © 2025 · Artist Jenny Williams

Lexi Theme by Code + Coconut