Lessons in Gratitude Day 771

My son and I got into a shouting match a couple of days ago–I mean a good ol’ holler near the top of your voice kind of argument. I was sitting here in my bedroom and he was sitting in his car. He had the presence of mind to pull off the road so as not to endanger his life or the lives of others. For a full three or four minutes that felt like 30, we hollered at one another, cursing and swearing, but interestingly not calling each other names. Almost as soon as the altercation started, it was over and we sat in our respective locations 2800 miles apart and a million miles away from each other and yet still on the line. There was no slamming down of the phone (not that you can slam down a cell phone to disconnect from the call), no abrupt hanging up, just silence, with me sniffling back the tears that were clogging my throat and nothing from him on the other end.

“You there?” I sniffed in my gurgly, tear-choked voice.
“I’m here.” He replied, quiet and calm. “I didn’t want to hang up with things like they are.”
“Me either.” I answered and exhaled.

We eventually talked through and beyond the issue that had caused the blowup, and by the time we’d ended the conversation we were back to chatting like nothing had happened.  I apologized to him for losing my temper and for “interfering” in his life, criticizing a decision he had made. Less than a week ago my son had turned 25 years old. In my book that is about old enough for me to stop vocally criticizing his decisions. That doesn’t mean I agree with them–I imagine there are a few I don’t agree with. But I need to learn to keep my criticisms or even my “helpful advice” to myself and let him make his own decisions and work through whatever circumstances or consequences arise from them.

I’m grateful this evening for a couple of important realizations I made in the aftermath of our argument. First, I am grateful for the man my son has become and some awareness that I’ve had something to do with how well he’s turning out. My son would not have gotten off that phone and left things angry and unsettled between us. He did whatever he needed to do to calm down, as did I, and we were able to talk through the anger and get to a good place. There is no doubt in my mind that my son loves me and I pray that he knows how much I love him, and I so appreciate his determination to stay in the conversation so that we could clear the air. I know that some people would have hung up, turned and gone away angry. He did not.

Second, I came to a realization as I calmed down from my yelling at him: I am taking another giant step toward letting go of him. He is no longer a child. He has his own mind, his own way of doing things that are different from mine and deserving of my respect. He is discovering what works for him and while sometimes I feel like I’m peering at him from behind my hands covering my eyes, I have to let go of thinking that my ideas or my ways are better. They are perhaps better for me, but they don’t fit or work for him. He has to find his own way. I have to let him go and let him figure things out on his own.

Truth is, he’s always been this way: always working an angle, trying to do things his way and doing them differently than what I was thought was the best way. I often thought he did them differently especially because they were opposite to the ways I thought they should be done. If I said left, he went right. If I said blue, he said orange, just to be contrary, or so I thought. But here’s where realization number three came: the occasional verbal sparring and even the rare but periodic knockdown drag out shouting matches I had with my son have actually contributed to his growth, his verbal reasoning, his considerable arguing skills (logical and systematic), and the very sense of independence I was fighting with him about this week. There’s an old proverb that says, “As iron sharpens iron, so one person sharpens another.” That is, it is through the process of this kind of verbal sparring that our wits are sharpened and we are made better for it. I have to think that even my son would agree with this assessment.

So I am grateful for the many lessons I learned during and after my recent shouting match with my son. It was difficult and painful for those first awful minutes of the conversation. But in the immediate aftermath and in the days that have followed I’ve learned so much about my son, myself, and what it means to let go. As a mother this is probably one of those difficult transition times: he’ll always be my son, but he’s no longer my little boy. In 1996 I wrote a song called, “Letting Go.” The last verse says:

I watch my children and I see how fast they grow.
Each day brings me closer to the time I’ve gotta let ‘em go.
But until then I hug them and I bless them and I love them and I let them know
That I’ll hold on tight and won’t let go.
Cause people come in our lives and for a while they stay,
But they’re not ours to keep,we let ‘em go,we give them away.
So we’ve gotta make the best we can of each and every day,
Cause all too soon we know we’ll face another time of letting go.
(Words and music by M. T. Chamblee, © 1996)

At the time I wrote the song, my son was 8 years old and my daughter was 6. Who knew I was a prophet as well as a songwriter? And while part of me wants to protest that a mother’s job is never finished, the truth is that the part of my job of teaching my son important life lessons that he needed to know growing up is over. Now my job is to step back and watch to see if they “took.” And from where I stand, I have to say he’s doing pretty well. Oh I imagine he might still need my advice from time to time, but as best I can I’m going to wait for him to ask for it!

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Lessons in Gratitude Day 770

I have been thinking a lot about forgiveness. A lot. It isn’t so much that I have been recently aggrieved by someone and needing to exercise my forgiveness muscles. It’s more that from time to time I become aware that I am still nursing old wounds that I thought long since healed. I have come to recognize that when I accidentally prod an old wound and find a twinge of pain still there it means that more forgiveness is needed. I believe that forgiveness is a process: there is no “one and done” here, like once you say “I forgive so and so person for what they did to me,” then that’s the conclusion of the matter and you’re all finished. Forgiveness happens in stages, in layers. The deeper the injury, the more the layers there are, as best I can tell.

Like many people, I have been on the receiving end of painful experiences inflicted on me by other people. Depending on the degree or severity of the experience and the duration of it, I could be forgiving some people for things that happened years ago. It still surprises me when I bump into things I thought I had gotten over. Something unexpectedly touches that tender place and I find that it still hurts just a little, even if it’s mostly phantom pain by now. And each time I encounter another little piece of unresolved hurt, I earnestly focus my prayers, thoughts, and intentions on offering forgiveness to the person or persons I associate with the injury. This includes in some cases forgiving myself for pain I’ve caused other people. Whatever the situation, I lift it up, examine and acknowledge what I’m feeling and, to the best of my ability, let it go until it shows itself again, at which time I repeat the process.

These days, almost every morning I offer metta–lovingkindness meditations. I “pray,” that is, I offer good wishes to a variety of categories of people, naming some people in each category. I begin with myself (because we need to apply lovingkindness to ourselves as well as to others), and cycle through: family and loved ones, acquaintances and people I am neutral about, “enemies” which for me refers to people with whom I struggle, whom I dislike or have issues with, and finally for all beings on the planet (which for me includes all living things.) It is during my prayers for my “enemies,” the people with whom I struggle, that I spend time thinking about and practicing forgiveness. As I proceed through each category of people I name names, but especially so when I am praying for my enemies.

I don’t have a long list of enemies, but as I say their names aloud I am reminded that some of the people I name I have not been in contact with for years–at least two of them I haven’t seen in 20 years. And yet I name them. Why?  Because when I first started a metta practice and naming my “enemies” I realized I was still carrying “stuff” from people who injured me mentally and emotionally all those years ago. And while I don’t consciously think about these people hardly ever, when I began to name the people with whom I struggle, their names came easily to me. It really shocked me because I thought I had long ago let go of the impact they’d had on my life. And yet, there they were. And so I offer the same good wishes for them as I do for myself, my loved ones, my acquaintances, etc.: may they be peaceful and happy, may they be safe and protected from harm. May they be healthy and strong in body, mind and spirit, may they live with joy, ease and wellbeing. May all of their sorrows, grief and sadness be held with great compassion. May their good fortune continue and grow. May they learn to see the arising and passing of all things with equanimity and balance. And so forth.

My hope is that as I pray for them, as I offer good wishes for them perhaps I am releasing a little more of whatever anger or hurt I am holding on toward them. I find myself truly wishing for good things to happen in and for their lives. Forgiveness is as much for the person doing the forgiving as it is for the one being forgiven. Anger, pain, hatred all keep us in prisons of our own making. Coming to a place of true forgiveness offers liberation from those prisons, freeing those who harmed us and freeing us. I am grateful for every layer of forgiveness I offer, and for the forgiveness extended to me for the times I have hurt or inflicted pain on someone else. It reminds me that I hold within myself a great deal of power to heal others and be healed simply by extending forgiveness to others.

One of his followers asked Jesus, “How many times should I forgive my brother or sister, seven times?” And Jesus answered him, “No, not seven times, but seventy times seven.” Really? That’s a lot of forgiving. The number of times I need to extend forgiveness to folks must number in the millions. Given the mathematics I reckon that forgiving is a lifelong process. I have my work cut out for me, but it’s good work and I’m committed to it. May we all learn to give and receive the gift of forgiveness. So be it!

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Lessons In Gratitude Day 769

Tonight’s Lesson in Gratitude is from Guest Blogger Michal “MJ” Jones.

It has been a whirlwind of a summer.

I returned to Seattle a little over a week ago, directly from Institute of the Musical Arts. Prior to IMA, I spent six and a half weeks interning at University of California, Santa Cruz. To say that I was drained upon my return would be an understatement. I am slowly gaining my energy back after a summer of work. Whoever claimed “summertime, and the living is easy” clearly wasn’t in graduate school!

I am returning to my role as an Assistant Resident Director, preparing for RA training and opening our residence hall buildings. I have often taken for granted the unique and privileged position I have – not only in material benefits but also in personal and professional gifts. Among the perks is compensated housing and meals. I often joke that we pay for our apartments and meals with “our souls,” as residence life is often time-consuming and highly demanding. But the fact of the matter is, I get to supervise many amazing student leaders, work with a team committed to student development, and grow in my own leadership and collaboration skills. So, all in all, it’s a pretty fantastic deal.

Another thing I’ve been reflecting on since returning here is the notion of home. When I think of home, I usually think of where my families are, or where I travel to during breaks and holidays. But I also use “home” (as many of us do) when I’m just referring to my apartment or where I happen to be staying at the time. And as soon as I entered my apartment (or my “cave”) after almost two months away, a huge sense of relief and comfort came over me. It was clean, it was beautiful, and it was homey.

And as I joined my colleagues for training the next morning, invited my friend for a visit over the weekend, and spent quality time with new colleagues and friends, I realized that Seattle and Seattle University are my homes. I am grateful for the gift and feeling of home.

It’s good to be back.

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Lessons in Gratitude Day 768

Mama said there’ll be days like this. So the old song says. I’ve used this line many times over the course of the past 767 days. Sometimes I was writing about really difficult, challenging days, but most of the time I was referring to the more mundane trying, aggravating days during which nothing particularly bad happened, but nothing particularly good did either. Yet, even in the midst of these days there are plenty of things to be thankful for.

I woke up this morning a little off balance. I am not sure what I want to write this morning, I scrawled in my journal at 5:54 a.m., I am feeling restless–can’t really describe it. The feeling persisted off and on (mostly on) throughout the entire day–through meetings and activities. And while for the most part I managed to function normally, by the end of the work day it was all I could do to get myself packed up, to my car,  and on the road for home. The commute was uneventful, but 75 minutes of uneventfulness didn’t diminish the feeling much, so here I am describing it in at the end of the day in very much the same terms as I first wrote about it this morning.

I’ve written about this sense of restlessness before; not solely my own, but an overall pattern I’ve been noticing among a number of people around me. There’s a sense of unsettledness like something is sort of out of alignment, not quite right, but not enough to totally throw everything off-kilter. I even checked the website of an astrologer I know, reading her predictions for a topsy-turvy August and shaking my head over the wildness. My vacation just two weeks ago is now a very distant memory, as if it never happened, though I still have the tan lines to prove I was indeed at the beach.

I am grateful this evening for the assurance I have that no matter how tired and cranky and restless I get there is a resilient, perseverant, calm and unflappable place in the center of my being and every once in a while I actually touch it and draw upon it. Even when I believe I’ve gotten to “my wit’s end,” I can still draw up from somewhere the strength I need to get through the tough moments, sometimes barely hanging on until the storm passes. I may not always sail through, but I always get through and learn a little bit more of what I’m made of.

I am listening to an audiobook right now that is set during the time of slavery in this country. I am a descendent of slavery on my father’s side of the family for certain and very likely on my mother’s side as well. I don’t have to go back very far into my family history to find it: my great, great grandparents on my father’s side were slaves, and my grandfather’s grandfather was a white man, likely the master of the plantation where my great, great grandmother was a slave. If I ever need a reminder that I come from a long line of people who know how to persist, how to survive against difficulties which I can scarcely imagine, I need only look back a few generations to find strength deeply rooted in my family history. I come by it honestly.

So when I experience the occasional “bad” day, I can easily put it into perspective. I am grateful for the many blessings that surround me, that weave their way throughout the tapestry of my life. If I were to pick up a rock and fling it in any direction in a 360 degree radius around me, there’s no way I could miss hitting some kind of blessing. Of course, I’m in the house and won’t be throwing any rocks (for which Honor is most appreciative), but you get my point. Everywhere I look as I scan the room around me, from the relatively expensive laptop resting on my thighs, to the comfortable and safe room I’m sitting in writing, to all the many material blessings all around me, I am grateful. For waking me up this morning having full use of my body and relatively sound mental faculties, I am grateful. I could mentally walk through my entire day from waking unexpectedly early at ten minutes to five until this present moment as I sit here typing, I would lose count of the blessings. So yes, Mama said there’ll be days like this, but I also know Mama wasn’t worried that I wouldn’t know what to do about them. Amen, Mama.

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Lessons in Gratitude Day 767

I am grateful this evening for the gifts God has given me, or to put it in less spiritual terms, the abilities I was born with and have developed over the course of my life. I was likely born with a measure of intelligence as well as a variety of skills and talents that appear to be innate, inborn, genetic. When you add to those naturally-occurring talents the life opportunities I’ve had to receive a good education in primary and secondary levels that prepared me for college and ultimately graduate work, what you arrive at is a reasonably talented individual. It is difficult to say this with a straight face and not sound incredibly arrogant; and it is certainly not my intention to do so. I am simply acknowledging the blessings of having been born healthy (something which I do not take for granted given the infant mortality rates around the world,) as well as being born into a social class that allowed me to go to good schools and be well educated.

This good fortune set me up to be in a position to get into and excel in college, which paved the way for me to go to graduate school. I am now in the one percent of the US population who has a doctorate, and when you factor gender into it I am among the .7 percent of women who hold a doctorate. If my doctorate were in a STEM field (science, technology, engineering, or mathematics) that would make me rarer still. Again, this is not to boast about anything as much as it is to acknowledge the good fortune I’ve had to have grown up in a family where education was highly valued. Both of my parents were college educated, which is yet another blessing: I grew up in a household with two parents. Having lived for a number of years as a single parent raising two children I know just how fortunate I was to have had the support and love of both of my parents as I was growing up.

Gratitude is like that: a causal chain of sorts where you realize that being grateful for one thing uncovers another thing to be grateful for and that in turn uncovers another. It goes to show that when you start looking for the blessings in your life it’s pretty hard not to see them.

I am grateful for the gifts of compassion, intuition, wisdom, and understanding. These are things I’ve discovered residing in me, they’ve become part of my personality, of the way I walk in the world. It has not always been so; it is in fact becoming so, a little more each day. How do I know about these gifts? I can feel them in the way I interact with people and the energy they feed back to me. There’s a kind of knowing that’s hard to describe when you are acting in alignment with your gifts; an effortlessness that comes about when you use your gifts in service to others. It is that combination that Frederick Buechner spoke of when he said, “The place where God calls you to is the place where your deep gladness and the world’s deep hunger meet.” I am not always sure that I have yet found that place to which God has called me, but I am grateful to be able to offer the gifts, talents, education and experiences accumulated over the 50-plus years I’ve been alive. And, as I think on it this evening, I see that it is good. So let it be!

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Lessons in Gratitude Day 766

Tonight I celebrate the birth of my son who incarnated on the planet 25 years ago today (August 18). I am grateful for his life, for who he is, for the many things he’s taught me–directly and indirectly–since he was born. I’ve written about him a number of times over the two and a half years that I’ve been writing this blog, including a post I wrote on his birthday two years ago (Day 50). I am celebrating who he is and who he’s becoming, at least as best I can tell about that. We can really only experience who we perceive people to be, and that in large part based on external, observable things. But as someone who watched him grow since the day he emerged from me, I have a pretty decent perspective, at least on his early years.

When I consider the thought that he is 25 years old, I keep hearing strains of the song, “Sunrise, Sunset” from Fiddler on the Roof  that speaks to the passage of time, particularly as we watch our children grow. Where indeed does the time go?

I had hoped to write a beautiful tribute to my son this evening, but my words fail me. Tonight I will simply repeat that I am proud of my son. I have watched him persevere through challenging times and learn to stand strongly on his own two feet. He continues to live life on his own terms, even if those terms are different from those I would have wished for or ordered for him. There are so many things I wished for him as I held him in my arms for the first time all those years ago; some of them have come to pass and some have not. I sent him a letter for his birthday detailing the things I am proud of and the things I still hope for him. Mostly I just want him to be happy and to feel like he’s living the life he wants for himself. I know he’s not there yet, but he’s making progress in that direction.

I am grateful for these first 25 years of my sons life and am hopeful that his next 25 will be rich and full and wonderful. Tomorrow is not promised to us, and yet this does not prevent me from hoping for all good things to come to those I love. Tonight as I wind down toward sleep I will offer prayers of gratitude as well as those hopes and wishes mothers have for their sons. I will offer well wishes for peace and happiness, safety and protection from harm, health and strength in body, mind, and spirit, and for joy, ease and wellbeing to be part of his life. And I will pray that the movement he’s made from being a funny,  headstrong,  intelligent,  stubborn,  friendly,  loyal young boy into a strong,  honorable,  funny,  headstrong,  outgoing young man continues to deepen and mature. And I will pray for a deepening of his own sense of generosity, compassion, and of course gratitude for the blessings in his life. May it all be so!

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Lessons in Gratitude Day 765

Tonight the Muses have once again deserted me. I would have been happy for any of them to show up to accompany me as I sought to write about gratitude. There were nine of them–Muses that is. Who knew? When I looked them up in the dictionary that is conveniently situated on my computer, this is what it said:

The Muses are generally listed as Calliope (epic poetry), Clio (history), Euterpe (flute playing and lyric poetry), Terpsichore (choral dancing and song), Erato (lyre playing and lyric poetry), Melpomene (tragedy), Thalia (comedy and light verse), Polyhymnia (hymns, and later mime), and Urania (astronomy)

Perhaps there is no explicit muse for blogs–though back in the days of Greek and Roman mythology there were no blogs. Still, I’d bet that perhaps Thalia is the one I’d most be needing for this blog–though perhaps epic poetry wouldn’t be bad had Calliope chosen to show up. But alas, what I have with me is the sounds of the night critters chirping and whirring through the open window as I sit on my bed, computer on my lap typing this blog. It has been a refreshingly cool day for August–my windows have been open all day, the air conditioning hasn’t kicked on all day.

Hey wait…was that Thalia making a brief appearance? Yes! Inspiration. Tonight is one for offering simple gratitude: those basic, uncomplicated, blessings that we miss if we don’t notice them. Like how much I appreciate sleeping with my windows open and the air conditioning off. I can listen to the night sounds in the evening and the songs of the birds in the mornings. So often as I sit I hear the unique sound of the “little bird with the big voice,” whom I discovered to be that Carolina wren, singing happily in the early mornings, along with the familiar songs of the cardinal, blue jays, robins and other winged ones. Their songs make me smile. They are such a simple, uncomplicated blessing. I am also grateful this evening for my younger sister and her family with whom I spend intentional time each weekend. While at times I worry that I make a nuisance of myself with my weekly appearances, I have been assured that my presence is welcome most any time. Today we went to the movies and dinner afterward. I had a lovely time with them.

I remain grateful for my favorite summer fruits: I can still find sweet cherries and watermelons in the grocery store, and will continue buying them for as long as the stores stock them and they are reasonably priced. Such a simple thing, but I love the flavors and the feel of summer. The summer days which have flown by are slowly giving way to fall–the days are shorter, the weather is cooling and before too long the subtle changes in the color of the leaves will begin, if they haven’t already. My weekday morning routine will shift back into back-to-school mode as I watch the neighborhood children line up on the sidewalk in front of my house where there is a bus stop. I could measure whether I was on time with my morning preparations by what I was doing when the bus picked the kids up between 7:23 and 7:27 each day. Simple blessings.

My apologies to the Muses as a group and my thanks to Thalia of comedy and light verse for showing up for me in the nick of time this evening. I am grateful always for something, sometimes it takes me a bit to figure out what it is and how to express it. Every day is a good day for gratitude and a good day for a smile. And so for no reason other than the fact that they make me smile and that they used to be a regular part of my blog, I am going to post a picture of my group of friends that I miss more than I can say and express my wish to encounter some of their relatives out here in Maryland sometime soon. Until then, I’ll simply smile at the pictures.

Trespassing Turkey

Turkey's at the Stop Sign October 2011

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Lessons in Gratitude Day 764

Tonight I decided to spin the wheel and pick a post. I was out late and ended up answering my phone and talked to my son for nearly an hour when I should have been writing this blog. That’s two nights in a row I allowed myself to be diverted from my plan to write and go to bed. It’s been a long week at work–I had deadlines to meet and multiple priorities pulling at me, but at the close of the week I feel pretty good. I got some good and important things accomplished. But I am tired and the vacation I enjoyed just last week is now a very distant memory. So thank God it’s Friday, as they say. It took me several spins to find a post I felt I wanted to share, but I finally hit this one from late July 2012 in which I once again expressed my gratitude for music. It is such an important part of my life history even if it isn’t as much part of my current life as I’d like. So enjoy this post from  day 377:

I am grateful this evening for music. Even as I write this I can hear my son playing an intricate and beautiful tune on his guitar. The sweet tones drift upstairs and I close my eyes and enjoy it. It reminds me that I need to get my guitar out, wipe the dust off of it with a soft cloth and remember what it was like to lose myself in the music. It’s kind of ridiculous to say that I’m too tired and stressed out to play when playing used to be what I did to help alleviate stress and anxiety. Perhaps I need to pledge to try to go back to daily playing and singing. The last time I did that, I played every day for a solid 45 days or so before I fell off the wagon and once again retired my guitar. These have been stressful days for sure. So now more than ever it makes sense to avail myself of the gifts I have around me to relieve some of the pressure. Music certainly fills that particular bill for me.

I wonder if the world would be a much happier place if people took a few minutes or so each day to do something that brings them great pleasure. Sing a song. Write a poem. Sketch a picture on a piece of paper. Take a walk in the grass with bare feet. Sit out in the sun and listen to the euphony of sounds that fill the air. Listen to a wonderful,stirring piece of music. Take the time to really savor the taste of the apple you’re eating. I believe that finding simple pleasures requires relatively little effort and costs little or nothing,yet we can get so preoccupied with the cares of life that we don’t take a few brief moments to refresh ourselves and renew our spirits. Simple pleasures are kind of like simple gratitude–it’s almost impossible to not find something to give you that small burst of happiness, just like it takes very little effort to find  things to be grateful for.

I can look around my room and see all kinds of things I could do that would put a smile on my face and lift my spirits. There’s the cedar flute on my shelf that I rarely get down and play, and yet from the moment I set my lips to the flute and blow, the low,sweet comforting sounds resonate with something deep in my spirit and I sigh. There are the knitting needles and ball of yarn lying in a box not two feet from my desk where I’m sitting writing this blog. I haven’t made an actual knitted object in about 40 years,but I find the act of knitting very relaxing. My frame drum sits atop a bookshelf on the other side of my bedroom. I used to play it as a means of prayer,the rhythmic drumming connecting with something akin to a heartbeat. The sketchbook that sits in my drawer and the dozens of colored pencils I’ve yet to use to try to create a colorful image. These artifacts represent lost opportunities that could as easily be turned into simple pleasures.

I am grateful for the recognition this evening of how little effort it would take for me to bring a smile to my own face by doing fun, simple, creative things. I think I will take a little time this evening to get out my guitar and play a little while. It’s sitting right there, just out of arms reach but some days it might as well be miles away. Just tonight, beginning right now, I think I’ll reach out for the simple pleasures that are close by and give myself the gift of indulging in something that will put a smile on my face. And I will be grateful.

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Lessons in Gratitude Day 763

Today is a good day to lay low. Last night I couldn’t seem to wind down toward sleep until midnight and I was on day four of my new earlier waking regimen, having decided that I need more time in my day and the best way to do that was to rise earlier. The trick is that I also need to get to sleep earlier so I am not a zombie during the day. I slept somewhat restlessly and woke at 4:55 a.m. As my alarm was set for 5:25 anyway, I decided to get up–particularly because I hadn’t been doing very well in my first three days of attempting to get up at 5:30 instead of my usual 5:45. Plus I had a major project I needed to complete for work this morning, so I wanted to get in early, which I did.

I am amazed and a little bit frightened that it is already mid-August. The summer, like the rest of the year, has flown by so fast I feel like I’ve barely had a chance to catch my breath. Each morning is a little bit darker when I wake up, especially now that I’m waking a little earlier. When I woke this morning at 5, I noticed that the night sounds of insects whirring and chirping had not yet given way to the morning songs of birds and the rumble of traffic on the street. Preseason football games are back on television, and the first regular season games are just around the corner in early September. The networks are advertising their new fall lineups of sitcoms, dramas, and gameshows. At work it is time to the students to return to campus: they begin moving in next week and classes start the following week. Where indeed does the time go?

But time, as they say, marches on, and I am again contemplating “what’s next” as I move toward winding down Lessons in Gratitude as a daily entity. I’m grateful to the faithful reader’s who’ve read every post since the beginning. Your dedication to reading it matched stride-for-stride my dedication to writing it. I am contemplating when to end the daily writing–at first I thought either on Day 777, because it’s a cool number, or Day 800 because it’s another century  mark. Both of those seem rather arbitrary, and except on those days when I spin the Random Number Generator wheel to “pick” a post for a given evening, I try not to do much in an arbitrary manner. Part of me would like to end this blog in a similar way as I started it: quietly and without a whole lot of fanfare. Another part of me wants to celebrate the end of something special. I’m not yet sure which part of me is going to win. I reckon I won’t decide that until I’m ready to. In the meantime, I’ll do my best to keep writing.

I am grateful to be at the close of a productive but long day. Tomorrow is going to be more of the same, but it is Friday (as hard as that is to believe.) A full week has passed since I left the beach where I spent a few glorious days. It feels like my vacation was weeks ago not days ago, but I reckon that’s just how it goes. I am grateful for having had the break and the time on the beach. I still have the tan lines to prove I was indeed at the beach, grateful that they take longer to fade than the memories of the vacation do. Tomorrow, as Scarlett Ohara says, is another day. I am hoping I sleep better tonight than I did last night and awaken at my new time refreshed and ready to go. Maya Angelou said, “Let gratitude be the pillow upon which you kneel to say your nightly prayer.” And indeed, that is the way I will close out this evening as I have so many nights before. Until next time…

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Lessons in Gratitude Day 762

Today I am grateful for the many messages I receive and lessons I am taught over the course of any given day, which then of course adds up to the millions of messages received and lessons learned over the course of my lifetime. Periodically (a little too frequently, actually) I whine about how I need direction from God/the Universe/the Creator and how God is not speaking to me. I call and cry out and pray, I complain, and God ignores me. But if I lift my chin from my chest, raise my head and my eyes and look up and around me, I’ll begin to pick up on the many ways I receive information and guidance from outside of myself.

This morning as I was driving into work I was remembering how many life lessons I’ve learned while driving. You can learn a lot about yourself and your attitudes about life, your state of mind at any given time if you pay attention to how you go about transporting yourself from one place to another. You can learn this even as a passenger, but my lessons are much clearer when I am driving. I talk a lot to other drivers as I maneuver my way through traffic: I can’t help it, it’s genetic. Get in the car with any Chamblee–whether passenger or driver–and you’ll find that each of us offers dialogue and running commentary on other drivers, on traffic, on the condition of the roads, etc. Some of us are quieter with this, but I defy any of my siblings to deny they have this trait in some measure. Whether it is nature (genetic information passed down through my father’s line) or nurture (learned by assimilative experiences growing up riding in the back seat of the station wagon with my father driving) we’ve all come by it honestly. I am uncertain of the extent to which my children have inherited this conversational characteristic as I have not spent a lot of time as a passenger riding with them. I am hopeful that their father’s genetics contribute a calmer driving disposition, though as I ponder this I reckon that he has his own processes of handling driving and drivers.

Several years ago I wrote an essay that I entitled, “Lessons While Driving.” Many of those lessons returned to me this morning as I was commuting in to work. When I went to look for the essay (I wrote it many years ago when I was living in Michigan) I couldn’t find it. But I will share one of the lessons I learned many years ago while driving: Sooner or later, we all get where we’re going.

Over 20 years ago I lived in a small town in Pennsylvania and had to commute 30 miles one way to get to my job at a university in another small town. About 98 percent of the drive happened on winding, hilly, two-lane roads with only about three places on the entire route where you could pass a slower moving vehicle. And boy were there plenty of SMVs on the roads. This was coal mining country of Western Pennsylvania and at least three days out of five found me at some point on my trip stuck behind at least one coal truck. Besides their being really slow and hard to see around (to pass on one of those rare places for passing), occasionally little chips of rock or coal might fly out and ding your car. I spent many hours in frustrated conversation with the coal truck drivers as we poked along to and from work each day. But it was on one of these trips that I made that important observation that has stuck with me ever since, including during today’s commute.

It had gotten to the point that I would plan my trip around the trucks (sometimes there was more than one of them rumbling slowly up the highway), biding my time until the passing zone came and I would fly around them. “Ha! Free at last!” I would gleefully zoom past them in my four-cylinder Dodge Omni we named “Meemo.” But inevitably after zooming past the truck and waving “So long, sucker!” approximately 10 minutes later I’d get to a stoplight at the edge of town and look in my rearview mirror to see the same truck rumble up behind me at the light. I had done all that fuming and sputtering, plotting the precise moment when I was going to finally get away from those slow drivers who were impeding my progress from getting home only to end up at the same stoplight at the same time.

It is a principle that I’ve seen played out over many years and hundreds of thousands of miles driving since then. No matter how much of a hurry I am in, no matter how I fly impatiently around people who are going too slow for my liking, regardless of how irritating I find some people’s inconsiderate, pokey driving habits: sooner or later we all get where we’re going–often at the same time. Whether it is a windy, hilly, two-lane back country road, a city street, or a five lane outer loop of the Beltway, sooner or later we all get where we’re going. I might get someplace three minutes faster than the car I flew past and I find myself wondering if it was worth the extra burst of fuel use or the aggravation only to end up in the same spot at the same time. Oh how I wish I could explain this lesson better.

What I have learned is to slow down, exercise a lot more patience and compassion with the drivers around me, especially on the highway. They are not driving slowly to make me late, and all the other things I regularly grumble about as I judge their driving ability, their indecision and hesitance in changing lanes, their basic understanding of the rules of the road. We are all trying to get where we’re going. Many of us are trying to get to work, some are trying to get home from work after the night shift. Some are worried about their sick mothers, others are trying to get their packages delivered on time, still others are trying to pick up their kids at daycare before it closes. There are thousands of stories and explanations behind each of those people on the road and theirs are no less compelling than mine. We are all trying to get somewhere, and with a little cooperation and understanding, patience and generosity, kindness and compassion, we can all get there safely and without incident, which I have been blessed to do–mostly–in the 40 years since I started driving.

I am grateful for the lessons I’ve learned about life while sitting behind the wheel of my car. There are more that I will perhaps share another time. Now it is time for me to take my rest so I am not a drowsy driver on my way home tomorrow evening. May we all experience generosity and graciousness as we take to the roads and may we arrive safely to our desired destinations. So be it!

Behind the Wheel (Note that I am parked...)

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