Lessons in Gratitude Day 761

It took me a while this evening to land on what I wanted to write about: I spun the wheel a couple of times, but was uninspired by what I read so took a pass. One of the posts I read was a Memorial Day 2012 piece I wrote honoring my father and his military as well as his civilian service. It was a good piece–you can read it here if you’re interested. What caught me about the post was the two pictures of my father–one as a young second lieutenant in uniform, the other as an old man looking into the camera and saluting–and I rediscovered what I want to write about this evening. I am grateful for the various forms of media that tell the stories of my life. Whether it’s the many photographs of my family that are on display on the shelves in my bedroom, the pages of journal writings scribbled in dozens of books over the years, or the videotaped interviews I did with my father a few years back, I am so grateful for the many ways my life story and parts of our family history are captured. And while I do need to catalogue some of these things and put them into some order (I have stacks of old photos scattered across my desk comingled with bills, old grocery lists, and bank statements), I am grateful to have them.

Here is a weird case in point: I have some voicemail messages on my cell phone that are about seven years old–they go back at least four phones. The oldest one is from my ex-husband calling to tell me about some concerns about our daughter and the “young man” she was interested in at the time (they were both 14.) Others were from my children updating me from college or places far away from me. Most are from family: a sister-in-law singing to me for my birthday a few years back, my nephew thanking me for a birthday gift I’d sent him some years ago, a distraught sibling who’d had a disappointing encounter with another family member. I have messages from each of my siblings–some discussing mundane things, others more serious–and a few from much-loved siblings-in-law. I wish I had one from my Dad but I don’t, and my mother died long before I even had a cell phone. These messages are in many ways part of the soundtrack of my life and I am so grateful to have them.

The other day I went through and listened to them, deleting a few because my voicemail box was getting full and couldn’t store any more new messages. It was tough to cull them, but I did delete enough so people who call me now can still leave messages. Perhaps this all sounds weird, but I don’t feel at all apologetic about it. I know that if I had a serious case of the blues or of missing a particular person at a time that’s inconvenient to call them, I can listen to the voicemails and gain a small sense of comfort. After my mother died, my father left her voice on their answering machine for many months. It was quite jarring for me to call the house and hear my dead mother’s voice answer the phone and tell the caller to leave a message. But now I understand better than I did back then his desire to hear her voice in whatever way he could, to be comforted by the sound of the recording in the absence of her physical presence.

Eventually I will probably erase the voicemail messages on my phone–either by accident or intentionally. But not today, and probably not any time soon. They, along with the pictures and videos, letters, cards and other pieces of memorabilia are all artifacts in some form or another of my life, of my shared life with people who are most important to me. I continue to treasure them all, no matter how odd it might seem. I am grateful to have them. I am going to post below the picture of my Dad saluting. I’ve included it in this blog a number of times before: it is a well-loved photo that is propped on the shelf across from my bed where I can see it every day. I am grateful for the way it and all the other artifacts connect me to my history, my ancestors and the people, places, and objects I hold most dear. I am so blessed.

Dad Salutes

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Lessons in Gratitude Day 760

Like many people, I enjoy a good mystery. You are presented with a situation, you search for clues, follow a few false leads, lose the trail, then pick it up again. There are plot twists and numerous unexpected events and setbacks, and occasionally dramatic and startling developments. And sometimes you come to the end of it and are left with a very unsatisfying conclusion while at other times you solve the mystery, tying up all the loose ends in a neat little package. Oh if only real life worked out like that. I reckon sometimes it does, but usually not, at least not for me.

My life has at times felt like a mystery–at least the plot twists, unexpected events, and startling developments. At times it’s been hard to tell who the “bad guys” are, and the “good guys” aren’t at all who I expected them to be. And on really rare occasions the bad guy and the good guy are the same person, which just goes to prove that everything is relative, particularly with a mystery. That said, the more that the mystery that is my life unfolds, the more interesting it’s becoming. I can look back at earlier “chapters” and recognize that all the clues were right in front of me, practically jumping up and down, and I still failed to connect the dots, getting really close to resolving a particular issue only to turn away from the resolution just steps away. In spite of all of that, it’s been a real page-turner so far.

Yesterday morning I started “Book 11” in my journal writing escapades that I titled, “Writing My Way to Clarity.” I’ve written hundreds (and hundreds) of pages every day since I first started my daily journal back on February 5, 2012. I’d started journaling off and on before that date, but on February 5, I hit full stride and have written every day since then. (Interestingly I took up daily journal writing right around the same time I took a brief hiatus from writing this blog on a daily basis.) My original purpose in writing in my journal was to clarify some things for myself, particularly the direction I wanted my career and my life to take during the period of my life that I often refer to as “the series of unfortunate events” that befell me early in 2011 and continued through the middle of 2012. Writing has always provided an outlet for me in helping work through challenges, outline approaches, question and examine my processes, motives, and rationales for whatever I was doing or considering at any given time.

So one might think that after hundreds (and hundreds) of pages of “writing my way to clarity” some things would be really clear by now, but not so. And if there’s one thing I’ve learned in the last few years it’s that not knowing is still okay. It’s okay not to know everything right now, in fact most days it feels like I don’t know much of anything in terms of my purpose on the planet, why I’m doing what I’m doing, and what I’m “supposed to” be doing next. It’s that balance between living in the moment and yet also having a plan for the future. Sometimes I strike it just right. So back to the mystery: just when I think I have a little clarity on one possibility, another possibility pops up. It’s like receiving an answer to a question I didn’t even realize I’d asked. So I reach a conclusion and take a step in the direction that conclusion points to then I get a nudge that says, “Not so fast, look over here.” Things that make you go, hmmmm indeed.

So if all this seems rather cryptic and perplexing and you’re wondering what any of this has to do with being grateful, I’ll explain it to you like this: sometimes we just don’t know what’s going to happen til we read the next chapter. I think I have something figured out–and I perhaps do–but new information comes in that causes me to test my assumptions, that challenges what I think I know. I have learned in my wiser elderhood not to get as rattled by this process as I used to. I no longer run around waving my hands and saying, “Oh no! Just when I thought I knew what I was doing, I suddenly don’t know again…” (Anyone who knows me, knows I’m not the run around waving my hands kind of person, but you get the general idea.)

So tonight I am grateful for the clarity I am receiving–it isn’t all cloudy and uncertain, and grateful for the patience I am developing to wait on the pieces that are not yet clearly in focus. It really is all about having the faith–both in myself as well as the powers-that-be (God, the Universe, etc.)–that everything is going to come ’round right in the end. So I will continue writing my way to clarity each day, and writing my lessons in gratitude each night, as the spirit moves me, and be grateful for it all. I continue to return to the wonderful quote by Rilke that speaks to this:

“Be patient toward all that is unsolved in your heart and try to love the questions themselves, like locked rooms and like books that are now written in a very foreign tongue. Do not now seek the answers, which cannot be given you because you would not be able to live them. And the point is, to live everything. Live the questions now. Perhaps you will then gradually, without noticing it, live along some distant day into the answer.”

So I am trying to love the questions as best I can until the day I begin to live into the answers, and am grateful for the mystery as it unfolds.

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Lessons in Gratitude Day 759

I am grateful to have a body of writing from which I can draw when I need to. Tonight feels like a good one to do so: I’ve been out most of the day and would like to retire earlier this evening as I am determined to get up 15 to 30 minutes earlier from now on. This requires, of course, that I go to bed 15 to 30 minutes (or more) earlier. I tend to stay up too late on most nights, which sometimes means I get less than sufficient sleep. All that said, I spun the wheel and landed on a post that resonated with me this evening. This post, written back in January of 2012, speaks to the miracle that is the human body. I am grateful for and aware of the gift of having a relatively healthy, able, sound body, and I am conscious of the extent to which I take it for granted. It was helpful to reread this blog post and be reminded of what a blessing it truly is.

This morning as I was waking for the third time (the first was to find my way to the bathroom,the second to let Honor out to to the same thing some hours later, the third and final time waking at a reasonable hour for a Sunday morning), I lay in bed and practiced breathing. In Vipassana (insight) meditation the breath is central to the practice; it is an anchor to which we attach our awareness and return to it as our restless,wayward mind wanders away from the present moment. As I practiced, I realized how grateful I am to be able to breathe, to perform this seemingly simple act of in a drawing breath then letting it back out. I acknowledged that while the act of breathing might itself be natural and seem simple, the mechanics–the biology,chemistry and physics of the process–is incredibly intricate and complex. I am not a doctor, and my courses in biology, anatomy, and chemistry are three decades behind me, but I remember enough of them to be aware of how miraculous and amazing our bodies are. How the muscles, bones, membranes, skin, hair–all the various constituent parts work together in an intricate dance that allows us to exchange various chemical compounds in the air we take in when we inhale and pushing out different compounds when we exhale.

The songwriter in the Old Testament talks about us being “wonderfully and fearfully made,” that we were “curiously wrought in the lowest parts of the earth (Psalm 139).” What I knew as I lay there breathing is what a gift and miracle it is to be able to do so. My years of study of anatomy and physiology, biology, biochemistry, and chemistry taught me to understand the science of various processes. My years of life and living with an awareness and love of a Divine Presence deepens and grounds this cognition in a foundation of faith and awe and wonder at the miraculous orderliness of it all. I try not to take for granted the gift of breathing–I watched my father gasp and struggle to bring in air in the last days and hours of his life. I’ve assisted each of my children as they suffered through asthma in their early years and as they work to control it now. So as I practiced deep, intentional breathing this morning and as I breathe naturally now while typing this blog, I am grateful.

We are not our bodies–many of us have suffered from living in a society that establishes standards of worthiness based on physical attributes– “beauty,” physique, skin and eye color, hair, etc. We are spiritual beings, sparks of the Divine wrapped in these physical bodies. And while I am more than this body and its appearance, I nonetheless celebrate what a miracle this body is. As I get older and things begin to work a little differently than they used to, I honor my body for what it teaches me about being adaptable to changes. I am wonderfully and fearfully made and am grateful for all the elements that come together to make me who I am in this moment. May we all be healthy and strong in our bodies. So be it!

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Lessons in Gratitude Day 758

It has been a long day–I spent several hours at my sister’s house constructing a loft bed for her daughter only to realize that my suspicions were true: the bed was too tall for the room and will need to have a few inches cut off the bottom of the bed. It was a bit funny if painful to watch her trying to crawl up into the bed without bumping her head on the ceiling. Alas, it is back to the drawing board for us on this project. It seemed like it was going to work, and then suddenly it didn’t. And so this evening I find myself a little frustrated with myself and a little cranky. It’ll pass, this feeling, but for this moment I think I’ll sit in it and splash around a bit in here.

I am grateful this evening for the written word. As I write this blog I am listening to my daughter’s new song–recorded and mastered with instruments, background vocals, the whole nine. It is beautiful and I am incredibly proud of her. Of course it makes me want to get my guitar out and sing, so I just might have to before I lay me down to sleep. As I pondered what I was going to write about this evening, I spun the wheel and ran across a post in which I included a poem by Mary Oliver. This sent me on a journey of reading various poems and I realize how much I enjoy  running across poems that speak directly to something that I’m thinking about or going through in my life. It reminds me that I used to be a poet, a lyricist, a songwriter. It has been a really long time since I was inspired to write a song. Play and sing every day, I can hear my friend joHn’s voice in my head reminding me to return to what I used to do long ago when the creative juices ran much more freely. Now they are more the consistency of pinesap, still present but flowing much more slowly now. I will have to see if I can get them warmed up and running again. Perhaps I’ll begin tonight just by playing and singing a little bit and we’ll see where it goes.

I am grateful to be inspired anew by the creativity of my children, both of whom have turned into wonderful musicians. While each of them was no doubt born with a gift for music, they have added training and hours of practice to shape this gift into an even deeper talent. I am pleased to have contributed to their growth over the years; some of the first songs my daughter played on the guitar were songs I had written, and every once in a while I’ll hear a little riff of my music in something my son has composed. I am proud of their wonderful talents and am frequently the beneficiary of new pieces of music they are composing. It’s like participating in a miracle of creation only it’s a new song being born rather than a living being. It’s a wonderful thing.

I started out this evening feeling a little tired and too out of sorts to write much, but after spending a half hour or so listening to my daughter’s new song over and over again, I’m feeling relaxed and ready to play for a few minutes before I take my rest for the evening. Grateful for the relaxation it brings, I’ll sing myself to sleep.

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Lessons in Gratitude Day 757

I am grateful this evening for family traditions. During my time vacationing with family this week I was amazed that before each meal we held hands and said the same grace over our food as we did when I was a child. I was holding hands with my 23-year old niece and my sister Ruth, and sitting across the table from Ruth’s children, my sister Sandy and at the head of the table her husband Al led us all into grace:

Divine Lover, Thou hast always met and will always meet
Each and every human need and we are truly grateful.
The Lord is my shepherd, I shall not want.
Amen

Tonight I sat down for a quiet dinner with Ruth and her mother-in-law, who is visiting for the week. We said our “Divine Lover” grace before dinner. “Ma” has apparently made this grace part of her visit with the family. My great nephew Alexander no doubt also knows the prayer. Whenever we are all together as a family–some 30 or so people–we form a very large circle wherever we are assembled and say our grace. The last time my entire family was assembled was at my father’s funeral in September of 2010. Of course, he was with us only in spirit, but as we gathered together to eat, he was no doubt on all of our minds.

There is something oddly comforting to me about this family ritual. It seems as though lately things have changed in our family. We haven’t gathered as a full family–all six siblings and as many of our various children as we can bring together, calling them in from their busy lives–as often as we once did.  Perhaps it is unrealistic to expect that we would, but I miss it. No matter how old I get I always want to be together with my siblings and their families. While hanging out with any one of them is enjoyable, the magic of the multiplier effect deepens the experience: the stories are wilder and more colorful, embellished by details and perspectives that can only be added by someone who lived through it. All of the inside jokes and friendly board game competitions are so much richer when there are more folks around.

My mother was in many ways the glue that held us together as a family. By force of will sometimes she could get us together, particularly on holidays, and she loved traveling to see various ones of us from time to time. When she died some of the energy went out of us, and our gatherings, naturally, felt different. And after Dad died three years ago we have not gathered as a full group since his funeral. Those of us who do gather enjoy one another’s company and appreciate the times we get together. I enjoy interacting with my many nieces and nephews, asking them about their interests, listening to their ideas and opinions, and hoping that in some small ways I am connecting with this next generation of family. I would love to instill in them a love and appreciation for family ties, including the extended families of aunts and uncles and cousins.

There are few relationships that match the importance and depth of close ties with siblings and parents and extended family. Not everyone has such connections to their blood kin, and I am deeply grateful to feel closely connected to mine. I am not sure I have my mother’s force of will to gather all my siblings together in one place; I wish I did and could get us together for something other than a funeral. Perhaps I’ll begin working on something now and see how far I can get over the next few months. Meanwhile, I’m learning to enjoy my time with whatever configurations of family who choose to get together. If I can’t be with all the ones I love, I love the ones I’m with! The more often I can do that, the better.

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Lessons in Gratitude Day 756

Tonight I am grateful for many things: first for a safe return for me and my sister and her kids from our vacation “down south” in North Carolina. The traffic was a bit heavier upon our return, so the drive that had been six hours on the way down turned into seven and a half on the way home. Still, other than my getting a little cranky as I ran very low on gas with no station easily in sight and a mildly ill-tempered return to DC-area Beltway traffic, we finally made it back to Ruth’s house where I was welcomed to stay for dinner before Honnie and I finally drove the last 20 minutes home. I am reminded again of how grateful I am to live near family and be able to connect frequently. I am looking forward to being able to connect at some point soon with my oldest sibling when she returns from her annual summer sojourn to Martha’s Vineyard.

I am so grateful for the much-needed rest of the past few days. Sitting in the sun–whether surfside or poolside–was exactly what my weary mind and body needed, and while it might have been really decadently nice to remain on vacation for a second week, I’ll have to wait to do that next summer and be grateful for the days I have ahd. Today was spent on the drive, leaving me tomorrow as the last official day off of work. Of course, I checked and responded to a number of work emails, but I didn’t stress over doing it: at least a few times I sent them from the beach. They didn’t require much brainwork, so I went ahead and sent them. I did not let it interfere with my enjoyment of my time off. I did my best to relax during those days away: I soaked up more sun than I had in years and even walked a few steps into the ocean and played in the pool–not bad for someone who can’t swim and is afraid of water. I made a conscious contribution to my mental, physical, and spiritual wellbeing that I hope will remain with me in the days and weeks ahead as things ratchet up at work.

I am glad to be back. My plan is to sleep in tomorrow–I’m going to try really hard to sleep until 10 a.m. I don’t often do that, so I’d like to see if I can manage it. Then I’d really like to spend some time over the next couple of days doing some thinking about some changes I’d like to make in my life. I’m going to start small with a few microshifts (like waking up 15 to 30 minutes earlier every morning) and then move up to bigger ones. We’ll see how that goes. I’ll also be working on a few projects with my younger sister as she gets her kids ready to start school in a few weeks. That should be fun as well.

Finally, I want to express once again my gratitude to and for family. It is almost always nourishing for me to spend time with my family, and when I can do so in a fun setting like we enjoyed these past few days it’s all the better. To my older sister and her husband who hosted us, their children, and my younger sister and her children, thanks to each of you for helping co-create many wonderful memories and times together. Thank you for the good times. I am looking forward to creating many more in the weeks and months ahead with as many of my siblings and family members as I possibly can. Our times together are precious and tomorrow is not promised to any of us. So I plan to make the most of each moment I have with them and will be grateful for each one every day.

The Crew, Outer Banks, North Carolina, 8 August 2013

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Lessons in Gratitude Day 755

Today was the last full day of this phase of my vacation. I spent it exactly the way it should have been spent: a couple of hours on the beach enjoying the breeze, the sounds of the ocean, conversations with my sisters, doing as much nothing as I could manage. Tomorrow, my traveling companions and I–two leggeds and my four-legged bestie–will climb back into my car for the six-hour (hopefully) drive home. It has been a good time. I am grateful to my sister for the invitation and for the time spent relaxing with two of my three sisters and various partners, children and their partners and members of the family. Next summer I hope to be able to spend some fun times with all three of my sisters and various permutations of family, but that it for another time and much will happen in between now and then to bring us all together again. Family is a beautiful thing.

Tonight I decided to spin the wheel to provide a supplement this evening’s post. I landed on a pretty good spot so I’m going to share it and hope you enjoy reading it as much as I did re-reading it.

I am grateful this evening for the gift of words and language, specifically tonight, I am grateful for spiritual expression often referred to as prayer. I pray constantly, I can’t seem to help it and I don’t really try to help it. It is completely natural and effortless to me, as instantaneous as thought. But this morning, I took a slightly different direction with my praying. Sometimes I pray with intention, a specific prayer like the night prayer I’ve shared in previous blogs (Google,“Lord It Is Night”and you’ll find it.) I recite it a lot, though I haven’t memorized it yet. It is a good prayer as I wind down to go to sleep; I’ll probably say it tonight. This morning, though, I found myself wanting a morning prayer, and rather than Google, “Lord it is morning,” or return to my childhood “Morning Offering,”which has elements I don’t particularly ascribe to any more, I decided to write my own prayer.

After a moment of wondering to myself  “Can I do that–write my own prayer?” I quickly chided myself, “Of course I can, I make up my own prayers all the time–every day in fact.”  But I guess when you commit something to paper or type it into your computer, it becomes more real somehow, more fixed. When you post it in your blog, I suppose it’s even more “out there.” That’s alright with me. I’m not trying to have my prayer inducted into a prayer hall of fame or included in a prayer book or anything else. It is to provide me with another means of expression, of communion between myself and One who is greater than I yet is also a part of me. So this morning I wrote a morning prayer in my journal. It is as yet unrefined, but that’s alright too. I offer it here as a gift of sorts in the same spirit in which I offer encouragement to each person reading this blog to consider what they are grateful for in their lives. I hope you find meaning in these words each night and in my Morning Prayer.

Good morning, God. It is a new day.
Day time is full of activity and action;
But in the early morning,let me turn to you
while it is yet still.
Let me offer this day and all it brings–
the work that I do, the people I encounter,
the triumphs and the challenges–for the good of all beings
and to honor you.
Let the actions of my hands, the thoughts of my mind,
the meditation of my heart, and the song of my spirit be pleasing to you
and to all those around me.
In the midst of the busy-ness, let me feel myself enveloped by peace and calm.
Let me experience moments of beauty and gratitude
until the night time comes and it’s time to take my rest and reflect
on the day just past.
Keep my heart and mind in perfect peace.
In your many names, I pray.  Amen and let it be so!

I am a big “pray-er,” communicating with God is a frequently occurring phenomenon. I am grateful to my parents for introducing me to church and various concepts of God. At various times in my life I’ve been a minister of sorts and periodically I ponder the idea of pursuing work in the ministry. Then I consider what I’m already doing out in the world and while I’m not preaching or “leading a flock,” much of the work that I do is “God’s work,” spiritual in nature, so perhaps there’s no need to formalize it. If there’s something God wants me to do, I assume she will tell me. In the meantime, I’ll be content and grateful with what I’m doing now. May it be so.

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Lessons in Gratitude Day 754

This is one of those days when I wish I had lined up a guest blogger to write for me. I mentioned to my sister the other week that I would stop writing this blog on a daily basis once I hit either Day 777, because it’s such a cool symmetrical number or at Day 800 because that was a nice round number as well. She voted from 800. Given that this is another 46 days of daily writing (versus 23) I am not sure which I’m going to go with. Writing every day is a struggle. The energy that is required to determine a theme for the evening and then have the creativity to write some coherent sentences about it are a challenge on the best of days. In the average week I perhaps have one good day during which I am inspired by the topic and can write a decent post of something over 500 words. I am grateful for those days.

I continue to find it interesting that no matter how I might struggle to put out a post on a given day someone, often someone unusual (versus one of my regular readers) will “like” the post on Facebook. On those occasions I shake my head and say, “Huh, who knew that [that person] was reading it?” That person is often not a close friend–someone I added to my friends list because we play the same game or a friend of a friend whom I barely know at all. Some people have “friended” me because of the blog and have begun reading it regularly. Who knew? It is for those surprise people for whom I keep writing. This is not to “dis” my regular readers; they are faithful and I am warmed by their dedication to reading these post–some have read it on a daily basis since I started two and a half years ago. I keep writing because I want people to be inspired to think about the blessings they have in their lives. I want them to take a five-minute pause (probably all the longer it takes to read these posts each day) and remember that no matter what might be going on in their lives there is always something for which we can be grateful. Always.

Like so many inhabitants of planet earth I have bad days. Sometimes I have bad weeks. But no matter how bad I might feel, I can always find something that I am grateful for. Always. I know I am repeating myself, but it is true. Even on my most challenged days when I feel like all I see around me and in my life is struggle and challenge, I don’t have to look very far before I have found several things for which I am grateful. And that is why I keep writing: to remind myself and to remind you. I have moments when I am at the height of frustration and anger, ranting and raving at God for all the things I’m disappointed about in my life. Even with tears rolling down my face, hollering at the top of my voice, my eye will catch something–a photograph of a loved one, my living, breathing four-legged companion looking up at me, any number of things in my immediate line of sight–and I am immediately plunged back into a grateful space.

I do not belittle my suffering–many humans experience suffering in our own ways. Many of my difficulties are first world problems: those faced by people of privilege and relative good fortune. I try to keep this in perspective before I complain about some of the things that bother me. It really is all relative. I am grateful for the times when I am aware of some of the absurdities of life. I try not to belittle my suffering, but I also try not to magnify it out of proportion to what real suffering looks like. I do my best to live my life from a place of compassion and generosity. Sometimes I accomplish it and other times not so much; but I keep trying. Writing this blog each day serves a very important personal purpose: it reminds me to keep looking every day for those blessings, those things which make my life richer and fuller for their presence. From a glorious sunset to a good meal, to a funny joke or a phone call from a friend, from the love a family member to the generosity of a stranger, there are too many such moments, such blessings to count. And so for the time being, I will keep looking, keep counting, and keep expressing my gratitude in whatever form that might take.

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Lessons in Gratitude Day 753

Today has felt like an incredibly long day, and in some ways I suppose it was. Vacationing can be hard work and I find that now at the end of this day (it is nearly 10:30 p.m. here) I am exhausted. All that playing in the pool and sitting around talking has been rather wearying. And then this evening we took a sunset tour of an area of the beach and dunes that is inhabited by wild horses that have lived on this stretch of coastal land for over 500 years; they are descendants of horses that were originally brought to the Americas by Spanish conquistadores back in the 1500s. By the time we got home and started to heat up leftovers for dinner it was after 9 pm.  Now I am here, grateful for a beautiful day, time spent laughing and playing with family, and  readying myself for sleep. As odd as it sounds, I really am tired.

I decided to spin the RNG (random number generator) wheel this evening to see if it would land on something that resonated with me this evening. After three unsuccessful “spins” I landed on a post from almost exactly two years ago, written on August 6, 2011. It began with the reminder that nearly 8 years ago now (in August of 2005) I moved from my home of nine years in Michigan out to live in California. I moved with great anticipation and a mixture of excitement and fear (“what have I gotten myself into?”) Looking back on it now I could examine my time in California from many different perspectives and play out various scenarios about what my life might have been like had I never made the decision to move there or how it might be different if so many things hadn’t unraveled as they began to late in 2010. But looking at it head on, taking into account all that happened to me, my children, and the circle of people with whom I interacted during my seven years there, I see how it has turned out exactly the way it was supposed to.

I think we can never really know all the reasons why things turn out the way they do; why “chance” encounters end up having deep meaning and others that seemed like they were going to be permanent fixtures in our lives turn out to be more transient than we ever could have imagined.  I suppose one key lesson from all of this is to hold some things as loosely as possible, not to cling to them, not to be desperate. Simply and gently hold my loved ones, my children, my job, my possessions, etc. In the end, nothing lasts, nothing is permanent–except impermanence, perhaps. If I could only remember this, my life would be much simpler and happier. But alas, remembering is the tricky part. Still I am grateful for the occasional awareness that reminds me to loosen the death grip I have on my children or family or possessions. Hold them lightly and when the time comes be ready to let them go.

I still feel like I have a lot to learn, but I am grateful for the life lessons and lessons in gratitude I gained from the seven years I lived in California. As the old folks say, “I wouldn’t take nothin’ for my journey,” that is to say that each step along the path of my life is priceless. Whether it felt “good” or “bad,” they all were important, they all had something to teach. And for the wisdom gained through those days I remain exceedingly grateful.

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Lessons in Gratitude Day 752

Today was Honor’s first day at the beach–ever as best I can tell. She and I ran across the sands down toward the water and Honor put on the brakes at the first breaker. While she was willing to wander a few steps into the surf, she had no interest in bounding into the waves like her “cousin” Blue who dove into the ocean with great relish. The people at the rescue shelter from which got Honor six years ago had speculated that she is part labrador retriever. I have long had my doubts about this, and her aversion to water in general and her reaction to the ocean today seems to support my theory that she is in fact not related to a labrador or any other pooch who likes being in water. Nevertheless I was excited to introduce her to the ocean. I found myself as excited as I used to be when I would take my children someplace new or share with them some new experience. Now that my children are semi-grown and living on their own, Honor is now my sidekick and I take her with me whenever and wherever I can.

I am grateful to my sister and her husband for inviting us to spend some time down by the ocean. I hadn’t realized the extent to which I’d been holding my breath over the past several weeks and have been glad to be able to exhale. Today as I walked over a slight rise and got my first glimpse of the ocean, I released a long, happy, contented sigh. I hadn’t even known what I needed until I topped that rise and saw the water. I became aware of how much I’ve missed “big water” since I left the San Francisco Bay area of California nearly a year ago. I don’t know how long we hung out at the beach, but I know it was just what I needed. The weather was perfect, the water was warm, and the air smelled wonderful. When we returned from the beach and had cleaned off, I sat outside on one of the decks, dozing and letting the warm sun dry me. It was a wonderful, lazy day.

I have no idea what we’re doing tomorrow. I for one am interested in taking a walk in the morning before it gets really busy with people walking and biking on the road. Perhaps Honor and I will walk to the other side of the narrow strip of land we’re on between the Atlantic Ocean and the Currituck Sound. No matter what we end up doing, the weather promises to be fabulous and I can’t think of a better way to spend another day of relaxation and fun. Yes, this is exactly what I needed and I am grateful.

"Please don't put me down," Honor to my niece Karlyn.

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