“Gratitude makes sense of our past, brings peace for today, and creates a vision for tomorrow.”
~ Melody Beattie
NOTE: This is a 2013
reprint in honor of Thanksgiving. For those seeking to live happy – from
the inside out, may the thoughts prove forever fresh.
Thanksgiving.
In a season of
gratitude, where most are offering thanks for traditional bounties, my
contemplation turns to giving thanks for the flip side: things that, at
least on their surface, hardly qualify for appreciation.
If your year hasn’t been punctuated by
health, wealth, marriage or a new house, you might be hard pressed to
find reasons to give thanks. Contrary to seasonal expectations, you
might be wading through job loss, medical bills or even an ugly divorce.
I’d hardly call these typical stories
for sharing around the Thanksgiving table. But read ahead anyway. A few
reflections from my life may help you discover ways to say “Thanks!” in
your life, too.
Lack:
For most women, the ability to conceive is a “no brainer.” For me,
failure to conceive lasted over a decade. Back then, motherhood came
earlier and first pregnancies in a woman’s mid-30s were considered a
medical risk.
My inability to conceive took place in
the more traditionally minded south. While I focused on sales quotas
and marketing plans, female neighbors and friends chatted about diapers
and naps. Totally out of place in this social mix, I feared that others
felt pity on me, but always hoped they wouldn’t.
Surprisingly, this so-called period of
lack would provide future reasons for thankfulness. Averse to debt, I’d
worked my way into a certain degree of financial freedom. By the time
our daughter arrived, I’d created the option for remaining at
home. Realizing I’d be half good at both career and child rearing – but
not especially great at either – I was able to leave my corporate job
behind.
Years later, I reflected upon certain
women who had cut short or totally bypassed a career in favor of
becoming young stay-at-home moms. In an ironic twist of fate, they
expressed later remorse for having missed out on the freedom and
financial independence that accompanied a professional career. With a
dozen years of work, travel and some financial success behind me, I had
contentment, peace and joy in my unplanned, yet delayed, maternal
role.
Illness: At 28, I
looked like a corpse and concealed a hideous scar that ran across my
neck. In its earlier stages (complete with metal staples exaggerating
the effect), I could have launched memories of Frankenstein flicks or
caused some to wonder if I’d failed at a suicide attempt.
That long, noticeable, red surgery
scar marked full removal of an overactive thyroid. Previously
misdiagnosed as a brain tumor and a heart problem, the illness had left
me exhausted, hyperventilating and wondering how I could push myself
through another 12-hour day at work.
You might wonder how being sick could
possibly provide reasons for giving thanks. Yet in truth, my
infirmity proved golden. Who, after having endured an illness and/or
disability, would have reason to judge, malign or mock another?
Nobody welcomes illness and the sense
of the powerlessness it can bring, but the experience caused me to
empathize and relate to the frailties of others. An unlikely candidate
for mocking others, I know that enduring my illness wiped away some
hidden areas of judgment. Scar or not, I can say thank you for this
personally enriching gift.
Abuse: Abuse comes in
all forms, from verbal and emotional to social, physical and even
sexual. Never pretty, it instead reveals the baser nature of man.
Oddly, I believed I was one of the
“lucky ones,” who avoided the statistics of both sexual abuse and rape.
Yet a stressful encounter in my late 30s reminded me of a painful, but
suppressed past, that gnawed at me through my first fifteen years of
marriage.
As a very young child, I was the
object of sexual abuse. In typical fashion, the abuse was delivered at
the hands of a family friend. I later learned that the same male
predator was charged with similar behavior by another young girl,
possibly two. Surprisingly, when my memories returned and their
confirmation became clear, I was relieved rather than offended.
I was remarkably happy to discover the
source of my nagging anxiety. Immediately, I offered a prayer of
forgiveness for a mentally ill man who did not know what he was doing.
Flipped on its side, this encounter with sexual abuse gave me
opportunity for forgiveness, closure and personal freedom.
Infertility, illness and childhood
sexual abuse may not provide typical conversation for the Thanksgiving
table. But my experiences demonstrate how we can find non-traditional
reasons to give thanks.
Empathy, forgiveness and freedom are
just some of the many rewards to be derived from trying times. Though
not always acquired through simple or otherwise sought-after means, they
can provide unique avenues and creative ways to say “Thanks.”
If you’re struggling with Thanksgiving
this year, be of good cheer. May you join me in discovering the flip
side of offering thanks this holiday season.
Maura is an International Speaker on Self Leadership and Emotional Intelligence
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