Change My World

Please note: For what they are worth, these comments represent Debbie’s opinions and perceptions based upon her own experiences and must be understood as such. Thank you.

Yesterday I was clever so I wanted to change the world…Today I am wiser… so I want to change myself.

So, what do you think? Are these words of wisdom? I think they might be…

The whole question is, should the world adapt to who I am? Or should I try to understand the world and how I fit into it?

For me, the blame game is gone. Bickering and arguing with my loved ones has stopped. Now I know that the bickering and arguing is my issue, my fault. How can this be?

Well, just the fact that I participate is on me. I had never looked at it this way before. It was always, “How could he…?!???”

I know this kind of change does not happen overnight. He will continue to try to push my buttons… but it is up to me to decide how I react.

Some days are good now. I am able to stop dwelling on it. I now can focus on myself. I plan for myself. At my age, doing 2 or 3 things is enough. It is all A-OK. I no longer have to complete a long to-do list. (And then beat myself up because I did not get it all done.)

The question is, “How do I teach this to my grandchildren, to the youngsters in my life? (I know I have already modeled the wrong thing for my own kids; I acknowledge that it is too late to teach them. Darn it!) But the question is, “How do I set boundaries without being rude? How do I meet my own needs without repressing others?”

I think the answer to this involves consistency. Often times, someone who grew up rough never learned this: the idea of doing your share, taking responsibility for chores, learning compassion at home.

Learn that the behavior of others is “what it is”.

I do not have to be offended when other people say or do things to annoy me. I can choose to take it personally and get hurt by it… or not. To understand that, back then, when “it” happened, I was a child. And because I was a child I did not have forgiveness, understanding, and compassion modeled for me.’

SPEAKING TO YOU NOW:

How can any of this be your fault? It can’t. You were a child, not a responsible adult. That means that you must forgive yourself and no longer hold yourself accountable. Then you can move on from the circumstances and forgive them.

Even though it can be extremely difficult, you must begin to look for the positive. When your heart begins to heal from the wounds, then you can begin to see your authentic self. I know that when the person who was supposed to protect you did not/or could not do it, you crave that protection all your life. You look for it everywhere, from parents, from siblings, from your spouse, from friends. Then, one day, you realize you must be your own protector.

When I went through this process, I suddenly recognized that it was The Plan of the universe, and I came to feel at peace. The guilt was gone. And it took the hurt with it.

Now I see things more clearly. My tears come from my new understanding. I am now in a whole different place. —dhc

 

LIFE WAS HORRIBLE AND NOW IT’S NOT

Please note: For what they are worth, these comments represent Debbie’s opinions and perceptions based upon her own experiences and must be understood as such. Thank you.

Here is a beautiful therapy success story that was told to a therapist today:

“I grew up in a bubble of trauma.  It started when I was a child and continued as I became an adult.

“Last week, however, somehow I stepped outside the bubble and was able to turn around and look back at it.  I noticed that all my life I had been aware of the hurts and pains, and I had wanted things to be different.  But they never were. My mother never gave me the love I needed; my husband never understood what would make me happy. I wanted to be nurtured in a way that really met me where I was; but no one ever could do it.  I knew I was wounded, but I never found a way to heal.  I kept expecting my husband to be different than the way he had been in the past, my mom to be different, my son to be different. But they never were.

“Then I stepped out of the bubble of my past. It closed behind me and I was free from those people and those experiences. I was no longer owned by their ideas of me. They were wrong. It was not who I am.   I have nothing to do with how they think of me.  I became aware of the triggers of my trauma. But I knew that it was not about me at all.

“Thus, I busted loose from the bubble. I could hear what was being said about me without the filters of my own wounds.  It felt like a burden dropped from my shoulders. I had been attacked by my own thoughts, not by what they said.  And I was no longer afraid. I didn’t do anything to make the fear go away; it just left by itself.

“Now, when my husband does something inconsiderate, I can say, “That hurt my feelings. It makes me feel unprotected and unloved.”  I give no lecture.  I do not ask why.  I just express how I feel. My attitude is different.  I realize that I can take what he says any way I want to.  I can just laugh at it if I want. I have control.

“I am different now. No more self-pity.  Writing helps with this.  I am now in touch with what I want and what I need.  I can let others be who they are so I can be who I am.  In the past I had always felt that I had to be a part of something or someone else, not an individual me. I had to be a wife, a mother, a friend, a cousin.  Now there is a me that is separate from others.  I have had a change in attitude.  It is ok to walk alone.  It is not ok to have an attitude.  I have changed and now look at the world differently. I am more aware that I am establishing a self.

“In some ways I am sad. My mother lived her whole life and never got the help she needed.  She stayed in her bubble.  I have left the bubble behind.  I can still remember it, of course. But now it affects me differently.  I still have the memories, but without the pain. (I thank EMDR for this!)  And the anger is gone, too.  I did my therapy homework, and it has made the difference.  My husband still raises the triggers, but I do not feel them.  I knock heads with my kids, but now I have a different response. I hope my daughter can get the help she needs and not have to go for years with her untreated trauma.“I am an individual now; I no longer (have to/want to) fix everything.  I just work on fixing me.

“And I feel so powerful! Not just empowered, but, really, self-powered.  I can do anything I want to do now.  Life was horrible and now it’s not.

“I can even forgive myself for not protecting the kids from their father.  I didn’t know that what he was doing was abuse.  I did the best I could at the time.  That was all I could have done back then. Now I know more.

“I am free at last.”

…dhc

 

 

 

WHAT DOES IT FEEL LIKE TO BEGIN TO HEAL TRAUMA?

Please note: For what they are worth, these comments represent Debbie’s opinions and perceptions based upon her own experiences and must be understood as such. Thank you.

Dear Reader:

You’ve heard of making amends.  Sometimes in person, sometimes long-distance.  Here is an example.

Dear C:

I am writing this letter to you, in absentia, as a part of my therapy and as part of my AA step work.  I have no intention of actually sending it. I do not know where you are now, or even if you are still alive. And I do not know if it would harm you if you received it. But I must write it for my own healing and to find some closure for old wounds.  My purpose is to lay this whole thing to rest.

I started another letter about 2 weeks ago, but I got stuck in the process. I realized, while writing, that that letter brought a bunch of unforeseen things to the surface, issues I hadn’t even considered. It is my hope that these old things might bring me to a place of acceptance and peace.

I remember that you and I met in Mrs. J’s first grade class in 1964.  We went all through the first 8 grades together as best friends.  The last day of the 8th grade we parted company. It was 1972.  I had just turned 14 and knew that I was going off to an expensive and exclusive boarding school in the fall.  I had just begun to understand that many local people had a deeply negative attitude toward that fancy private school and the people who went there.  It had a 100-year history and generations of resentments for its exclusivity.  But I remember that you and I vowed to stick together forever after.  We didn’t.

I think the exact time of our “break-up” was that summer, shortly after our 8th grade year.  You and your friend, S, road your ponies over to my house to spend the night that Friday night, and play the next day. But that Saturday morning Daddy put all three of us to work repairing a fence out back behind the barn where we fed the cattle.

I remember that you and S were perturbed at being commanded to do that work, and shortly you and S got on your ponies and road back to your home.  You never came back. I never saw you again.

David L. Avery, M3D Photography

I still feel the pain over losing you from my life.  I am pretty sure Daddy engineered the whole thing to sabotage our friendship. And it seems to have worked.  At this point I have not seen you, my dearest friend, in 46 years.  The old wound has not gone away. Daddy was good at anything he chose to do, and sabotage was one of his areas of expertise.

For some time, I felt resentment toward you for abandoning me.  I thought for a while that it was my fault.  Then the memory surfaced: that Saturday morning Daddy was trying to take advantage of free labor. It all began to make sense. He ran you off and out of my life.  Daddy was the one who killed our friendship.

Daddy was a master of manipulating others in painful and punitive ways.  I was not the only victim; Mama frequently caught the brunt of his maneuvers.  It was how he controlled people.  C, I have long wanted to apologize for my father and what he did.  I am so sorry! And I still love you to this day in a way I’ve never loved anyone else.

I had begun to realize just how different my family was from every other family I knew.  I was unusually fearful of the parents of other kids, especially their fathers.  I began to discover that my family was somehow really warped in comparison.  I didn’t know it at the time, but I think my father was holding my mother, my sisters and me hostage.

I know you did not particularly like your own step-father, but I think you must have realized that my father was something entirely different.  As I think about it now, I think my mother ran interference so you and I could have time together. Daddy was usually off running some kind of errand for one of his many projects.

I suspect that your parents probably had a hand in ending our friendship. I could hardly blame them. I would want to keep my son out of harm’s way too.

By then, my family’s relationships in the community had begun to unravel.  We no longer went to church.  There were no more gatherings or dinner parties.  I suppose the festering isolation was fueled by Daddy’s alcoholism, but I am convinced that Daddy had mental health issues that preceded his decline into alcoholic madness.

Back in those days none of us had any idea of what alcohol does to a family, and we certainly had no idea about what we could do about it.  We all sort of went into a kind of bunker to ride out the unpredictable storms. 

My world included life at the boarding school and life on the farm. You had gone into the world of the public high school.  Our worlds were completely separate.  It was as if you had died, or perhaps you had erased me from your life.  At lease that was the way I interpreted it at the time.

After I learned to drive, I rarely went anywhere but school. For a long time, I was afraid to leave home. When I was at home, Daddy had me with him nearly all the time.  It felt like he wanted to keep his eye on me.  Going places on my own was discouraged and I also felt that I had to stay close to home for the next unpredictable crisis—to save Mama and the girls.  Come to think of it, I have lived most of my life close to home and in fear.

There are patterns here. There is so much more below the surface.  I can hardly articulate what I want to say.  I am shaking as I write this.  Fortunately, I have two avenues of help, so I don’t have to do this alone.  I have an understanding therapist and I have the fellowship of AA to help me on my journey through the darkness.

I guess this is a good place to end this letter for now. I still love you and I am sorry for what happened.  There is so much shame! I have begun to see how many relationships were poisoned and destroyed during those years.  I have only now begun to revisit all the feelings of shame I felt because of my family.  I am looking for better ways of dealing with that.  I would like to move on to a healthier life now. 

Today must begin another day of letting go and healing.

Thank you, C., for hearing me.

Boundaries vs. Barriers

Please note: For what they are worth, these comments represent Debbie’s opinions and perceptions based upon her own experiences and must be understood as such. Thank you.

Boundaries vs. Barriers.  How do you know?

I mean, how do you know if you are doing it right?  We all need boundaries, but we do not want to establish barriers. Or do we?  And what is the difference between boundaries and barriers?

Well, let’s start with definitions. Boundaries are what you do to keep a relationship healthy. Barriers are what you do to shut down a relationship.

If you have healthy boundaries, you have a clear distinction between who you are and who someone else is. Boundaries enable you to know yourself, what you stand for, your place in the world.  For example, you recognize that your place is different than that of your children.  You know that your purpose is different; for example, your purpose is to teach them to be competent adults, their job is to learn as much as they can about the world.  There is a boundary between friendship and intimate romance. There is a boundary between what you say and do at work, and what you say and do at home with your family.  It is when you cross the boundaries in these realms that things go awry.  Often times these problems occur when you get too involved in someone’s life, when you fail to distinguish what is their issue and what is your own. (Co-dependency, anyone?)

What about barriers?

Barriers are things, circumstances or forces that prevent access or passage. They impede or prevent rather than encourage.  For example, there may be a language barrier. Or prejudice may be a barrier to getting to know someone.

Barriers can be a problem when they occur without careful thought. But they can be a resource when you put them in place to prevent contact with someone who is hurtful and destructive to you.

So, a phone can be used to contact someone. You can implement boundaries by letting the person with whom you are talking know something about what hours of the day it is convenient for you to talk, or the subjects you are willing to discuss.  But when someone abuses you or the content of the call is hurtful to you and you cannot seem to educate the person about your preferences (I.E., your boundaries) you may consider erecting a barrier. You might say, “If you call more than once per day, or if you call after 10 pm, I will not answer.”  Or, if you cannot get them to follow this rule, you may block their calls altogether.

Healthy people have boundaries and are aware of them. They communicate about them freely to others and, while boundaries evolve over time, they are “open information” which represent one’s values, choices, beliefs, etc.  Barriers are what healthy people put in place to protect themselves from people or things that risk injuring them.

To be balanced and functional human beings, we need to have both boundaries and barriers.

The thoughts that I have articulated above are rather simple, or even simplistic. If you have been thinking of issues in relationships, often barriers and boundaries are at issue. If this is true in your case, you might consider talking them through with a counselor. Often clarity can bring relief from anxiety, depression or stress….dhc

All Aboard for Al-anon!!!

Please note: For what they are worth, these comments represent Debbie’s opinions and perceptions based upon her own experiences and must be understood as such. Thank you…

Al-anon is a resource for anyone who has a family member or friend who struggles with alcohol.  Its program offers comfort and support for you when you have tried and failed to do something about another person’s drinking.

It’s a pretty interesting concept, really. It assumes that the alcohol problem is a family problem.  It understands that the attitudes and behaviors of those of us who have an alcoholic in the family can change, and when they change all the other dynamics change too. It is a powerful and subtle tool to aid an alcoholic to recover.

I think the major thing that Al-anon provides is perspective. It helps you to look at things a bit differently and understand which part of the situation is yours…and what part is the drinker’s responsibility.  It helps you control and calm the anxiety when you run out of options for what to do next.

It helps you see how completely useless your past efforts may have been.  And it helps you see in what ways you may be doing more harm than good.  It helps you take an honest look at the situation. It helps you find the serenity and balance you need in order to discover what parts of the situation you can change. It is a way to stop prolonging the drinking and the agony.

Do you think doing that takes courage?  You bet it does.  But Al-anon is a place to get the facts about your role in the sickness of alcoholism and find out how to impact your family’s recovery.  You can also find a sponsor there, someone who can support you on a personal level while you struggle with all this.

Al-anon helps you come to terms with the 3-C’s: You didn’t CAUSE it, you yourself can’t CONTROL it, and you can’t CURE it.  But you CAN influence and enable the alcoholic to come to terms with what he needs to do to change.  When that happens, you can make a profound difference by encouraging the alcoholic to reach out and ask for help.  Al-anon can help you “get ready” for that moment and know what to do when it comes.

You can find Al-anon meetings on the web.  They are available online, 24/7/365.  Start at al-anon.org.  Try it out. Go to at least 6 meetings.  See what happens…dhc

What makes AA effective?

Please note: For what they are worth, these comments represent Debbie’s opinions and perceptions based upon her own experiences and must be understood as such. Thank you…

Here are more of my thoughts about the Fellowship of AA.

  1. What are chips all about?

Well, they are a way for the AA program to demonstrate its commitment to you and to mark your progress with the challenge of sobriety.  They are a way of making a public announcement of how successful you have been. In the beginning, you pick up a chip; If you have made it 30 days, you often pick up another chip. (These are, most of the time, poker chips, just round plastic disks, a size you can put in your pocket.) Then, as time goes on, you pick up a yellow chip, a blue chip, a red chip, etc.  The colors are not set in stone, and the idea of having chips at all is not mandatory.  Some groups have them, some do not.

As you walk around with a chip as your pocket piece, it reminds you of AA’s faith in you and in your success.

Sometimes, if someone picks up a chip signifying long sobriety, say 10 years or more, there will be a tiny presentation ceremony and a great deal of applause and merriment.

  1. What are the steps?

Well, the AA principles of sobriety are built on 12 steps that people who “work the program” believe in.  The founders of AA (1936, Mr. Bill Wilson and Dr. Bob) figured out the steps as being the way to move yourself from addiction to sobriety.  Most people who are successful in AA understand that they are alcoholic even if they have been sober in the program for 30 years.  They understand that they are just one step away from beginning to drink again, and most of them study and meditate on the steps daily. The steps are challenging, of course. And difficult to carry out. Some are harder than others. For example, for one of the steps you must make an honest and fearless inventory of the names of all people you have wronged.  Does this sound like an exercise in humility?  You bet!  Good for the soul and good for your future sobriety.

  1. What is a sponsor?

A sponsor is a person who has been in the fellowship for a while and a person whom others look up to as having been successful at getting and maintaining sobriety. It is a person who is available to you, on a personal confidential basis, to help you maintain sobriety. The sponsor knows the steps and knows you, too. Their job is to keep you on track with your sobriety, and remind you that you do not struggle in isolation.  The relationship with a supportive sponsor feels like unconditional love; it is an experience in self-discovery and helps you build confidence in your ability to learn, grow and change.

AA was invented long before it became fashionable to seek psychotherapy.  It used to be a last stop on the train of desperation.  Not sure it is that for everyone today.  Culture and society have changed.  But here is an interesting idea:  Some people have said that AA is the best place to go for healing therapy, even if you don’t exactly have an addiction…. dhc

Could AA be right for you?

Please note: For what they are worth, these comments represent Debbie’s opinions and perceptions based upon her own experiences and must be understood as such. Thank you…

Photo by Art Bennett, 24 years clean and sober

If you are curious about Alcoholic Anonymous, here is some information.  I have attended hundreds of meetings over the years that I was married to a member of the fellowship.  Prior to meeting him, I had known nothing about the group, so I learned a lot on a fast-track during those years.  In any event, I wanted to provide my informal impressions, in case they are valuable to you.  You can get official info about AA from internet sources, including but not limited to: [https://www.aa.org]

AA is a fellowship of men and women who have a desire to stop drinking.  There are no dues or formal membership rolls, and it is open to anyone. Group meetings take place everywhere in the world and of course, right now most meetings are virtual.  This means that you can attend a meeting 24/7/365 without leaving home.  Go to [https://aa-intergroup.org/oiaa/meetings/] where you can instantly locate a meeting.

Meetings are generally open to anyone whether or not you have a drinking problem, although some meetings are designated closed, meaning that they should be attended only by those who think of themselves as having a drinking problem.

Meetings can take several formats, including:

  • speaker meetings, meaning that someone will be giving a speech about their experience, strength and hope regarding their struggle with alcohol.
  • discussion meetings, where a subject is chosen, for example, “gratitude,” or “change,” or “forgiveness.” And people offer comments and their thoughts on the subject.
  • study meetings, including Big Book or 12-step study, where the AA literature is read and discussed.

There are also meetings which are gender-specific, for the comfort of those who attend.

While there are no fees to participate, most of the time a hat is passed at the end of the meeting and those who wish, or can afford it, put in up to $1.  AA discourages people from putting in more money because they do not want anyone to take ownership of the process.  The money is used to buy such things as coffee for the gatherings. This is a volunteer-run organization and people do not earn a salary for running a meeting.

What can you expect to happen at a meeting?

With very few exceptions meetings will last one hour.  If you hear names of the participants, they will be first names only; no last names are used. The principle of anonymity applies in the meetings and in the group as a whole. No one is allowed to “out” anyone by telling others that they have been seen at a meeting.  It is the choice of any member to decide if, when, how and why they will reveal to another person that they participate.

Most of the time at the beginning or the end of a meeting someone will make general announcements and it could be that a prayer is repeated.  Sometimes the group will stand up and hold hands in a circle. At the end they may say an encouraging phrase such as, “keep coming back.”

Then people may begin to chat or help to fold up the chairs or get another cup of coffee.

It should be noted that it is not necessary for you to speak at a meeting at all. You may remain silent, and if your turn should come around, you can simply say, “I pass.”

Often times there are one or two persons who take it upon themselves to greet newcomers and offer them information or literature about the program.  The point they make is that everyone is welcome and it is not necessary to say anything about who you are, where you come from or why you are there.

Sometimes during a meeting chips are distributed.  It is an interesting process. More about it and sponsors/sponsees in the next blog. …dhc

 

 

What do you want to do with your life?

Please note: For what they are worth, these comments represent Debbie’s opinions and perceptions based upon her own experiences and must be understood as such. Thank you…

… or

What do you want to be when you grow up?

This has always been an interesting question for me.  And it is one I like to pose to my clients.  (Especially interesting, perhaps, in that I treat only adults.)

But people who come to see me generally want to change something in their lives.  So here is a fable, authored by George Reavis in the 1940’s.  It gives me a way of looking at individuals as I try to help them figure out what to do with their G-d given strengths.  See what you think of the message.

The Fable of the Animal School…

Once upon a time, the animals decided they must do something heroic to meet the problems of a “new world” so they organized a school.

They had adopted an activity curriculum consisting of running, climbing, swimming and flying.   To make it easier to administer the curriculum, all the animals took all the subjects. 

The duck was excellent in swimming. In fact, better than his instructor. But he made only passing grades in flying and was very poor in running. Since he was slow in running, he had to stay after school and also drop swimming in order to practice running. This was kept up until his webbed feet were badly worn and he was only average in swimming.

But average was acceptable in school so nobody worried about that, except the duck. 

The rabbit started at the top of the class in running but had a nervous breakdown because of so much makeup work in swimming. 

The squirrel was excellent in climbing until he developed frustration in the flying class where his teacher made him start from the ground up instead of the treetop down. He also developed a “Charlie horse” from overexertion and then got a C in climbing and D in running.

The eagle was a problem child and was disciplined severely. In the climbing class, he beat all the others to the top of the tree but insisted on using his own way to get there. 

At the end of the year, an abnormal eel that could swim exceedingly well and also run, climb and fly a little had the highest average and was valedictorian. 

The prairie dogs stayed out of school and fought the tax levy because the administration would not add digging and burrowing to the curriculum. They apprenticed their children to a badger and later joined the groundhogs and gophers to start a successful private school.

I strongly believe in working with an individual’s strengths.  Our strengths are what help us achieve success in anything we want to do.

Let me know if you’d like to chat about this….dhc

How do you know its time to go…..?

Please note: For what they are worth, these comments represent Debbie’s opinions and perceptions based upon her own experiences and must be understood as such. Thank you…

… HARD QUESTIONS… TOUGH ISSUES…

Interesting topic, I think.  Very hard to know what to do sometimes…. I have gathered some guidelines for your consideration…  When you are in a relationship that is not working, the question of when and how is probably in your mind… these ideas might help you clarify your thinking and guide what you say to a counselor as you begin to talk through things.

  1. If there is some reason you do not trust the person, this is the time for careful consideration. Why do you not trust?  Have they lied? Cheated?  Stolen?
  2. Have your values stopped meshing? Have you reached a point where you thought you had similar perspectives, but then you came to understand that you did not?
  3. Are you bored? No longer interested in spending time with them?  Prefer to be alone instead of in their company?
  4. Have you stopped sharing a vision of the future?
  5. Can you feel the emotional distance?
  6. Do you feel blamed rather than supported to find a solution to daily problems?
  7. Have you become aware that you are not their first priority? Or their second? Or third?
  8. Are they out of reach, not calling or texting or making plans with you?
  9. Do they avoid commitment to you, even though it is “time” for them to do so?
  10. Is there someone else in your life? Either in real life or in your dreams?
  11. Has there been physical OR EMOTIONAL violence?

What to do instead of leaving…

  1. Communicate! Let them know how you feel. Use “I-messages” to express your feelings. Or write them a letter. And then watch to see how they respond.  Are they getting defensive?  Do they blame you instead of taking responsibility?  Do they stonewall or just brush you off?
  2. Notice your internal feelings. Does this person trigger anger/rage in you?
  3. Make sure you are clear about this rather than ambivalent/confused; talk it through with someone you trust.
  4. Make certain you have a safe place to go.
  5. Make sure you have some friends/family who support you.
  6. Make sure your own money is safe.
  7. Consider whether you need an attorney or a marriage counselor. If you need an outside opinion, get it before you take any steps.
  8. Invite the almost-ex to go to counseling with you.
  9. If he/she refuses, go to a counselor on your own.

In all circumstances, be aware of the 4 elements that John Gottman uses to determine the level of stability in your relationship: Is there criticism? defensiveness? stonewalling? condescension? If so, take these signs seriously, and get going to get help. …dhc

P.S.   My favorite book on this subject is an old one by Mira Kirshenbaum, Too Good to Leave, Too Bad to Stay.

Find Blessings While Sheltering-At-Home

Please note: For what they are worth, these comments represent Debbie’s opinions and perceptions based upon her own experiences and must be understood as such. Thank you…

Have you found the blessing in the corona virus yet?

I have…

The slowdown in living has allowed me to notice all sorts of opportunities. For example:

  • I have time to reach out to old friends and family with whom I have been out of touch.
  • I have been able to share things I had too much of with folks who need those things.
  • I have had a chance to offer strength, hope and faith to others who are failing in spirit due to all this.
  • I have noticed the things I used to take for granted, and appreciate them.
  • I have been able to figure out how to patronize local businesses from the curb or from the internet so that they have a chance to keep going.
  • I have helped folks get comfortable with telehealth and internet counseling.
  • I have had a chance to express my love and appreciation to the people closest to my heart.
  • I have had a chance to remember how to cry and mourn.
  • I have had a chance to memorialize the losses.
  • Gardening!!!
  • I have cooked and enjoyed things from the back of the freezer.
  • I have had time to take more walks.
  • I have absorbed poetry sent over the internet to inspire and sustain me.
  • I have done on-line learning …new skills to help my clients, new ways to do old tasks.
  • I have cleaned out junk drawers, closets, cabinets, attic, basement.
  • I have come to appreciate the fragility of life.

 

What about you? Has there been a silver lining for you? Even among the moments of anguish and pain?