Learning from Bees: A Journey Towards Healing

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The Secret Life of Bees by Sue Monk Kidd is the story of a fourteen-year-old girl named Lily, who runs away from her abusive father with her housekeeper to the town that her late mother had once been to. There, she meets August and the Boatwright sisters, who live in a bright pink house and own a bee farm. These women teach her all about life through bees and the black Mary statue that is kept in their house. Lily comes from a rough situation, surrounded by negativity, but the sisters take her in and teach her what family and love is. Although living in a world where, for her, love is scarce, Lily is able to learn from the all negatives in her life, which then turn into positives, and Lily is a better person because of what she learned. Towards the beginning of the story, Lily feels conflicted and guilty. She doesn’t have much going for …show more content…

Who was I going to ask about that? And who but my mother could’ve understood the magnitude of driving me to junior cheerleader tryouts?”(13). Her father, T-Ray, never liked to talk about Lily’s mother, and didn’t even like to hear her name. T-Ray was also cruel to Lily, never showing her affection and neglecting her while also giving her harsh punishments. Once, while lying in bed, Lily “thought about dying and going to be with my mother in paradise”(3), where her mother would kiss her and forgive her. Later on, she is still faced with death. She learns that June, one of the Boatwright sisters plays cello for the recently departed and dying, and used to work at a mourgue. May’s twin, April, had killed herself when they were much younger, and later, so does May. Not only that, but Lily is also living in a world faced with prejudice and racism. Since The Secret Life of Bees takes place in the 1960s South, discrimination runs rampant. Lily sees it everywhere, from T-Ray’s prejudice, to how the law treats Rosaleen and Zach. When Rosaleen is arrested, it is because

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