Emerging from Tragedy

When I was 11 years old, my parents gave me the bad news.

After months of searching for the cause of my mother’s increasing difficulty in keeping her balance and her frequent falls, she was finally diagnosed with a rare, incurable disease that would slowly paralyze her entire body.

Mom’s hand held mine as Daddy assured me the doctors would do everything they could to slow this monster’s progress.

Mom would get a pair of special crutches next week and some medicines that might help her. She would still teach nurses and direct the medical staff at the hospital where she worked.

“And we’ll still be the same happy family that we are now,” my dad said, the glimmer of a tear in his eye.

It turned out he was right.

*              *              *

We all encounter tragedies. Loved ones die. Accidents and disasters smash into our lives. We lose jobs, friends, partners, houses, health. We get betrayed. We fail.

But we’re a persistent lot, we humans. We go on, whether we have a taste for going on or not.

Happiness researchers Hicks and Foster in their book, How We Choose to be Happy, say the ones who made a promise to themselves to rediscover happiness after major life disruptions all used the same process to go forward. The authors dubbed this process “recasting.” I think of it as giving the dice a fresh toss.

Recasting Your Lot

In their world-wide interviews with hundreds of famously happy people, Hicks and Foster encountered many who had endured deep and wide-ranging tragedies in their lives. And all of them described how they had resurfaced by going through the same two-stage course of action.

It starts with their decision, in the face of crisis, not to be a victim, but a fighter.

None of us gets through life without facing our share of painful, sometimes devastating circumstances. When they happen, we’re faced with a choice: to give up or to go on. Healthy people choose to go on, even when they can’t begin to see how going on is possible.

The healing wasn’t instant for the folks who overcame their tragedies. In some cases, it took months or years for people to reconnect with happiness again. But those who succeeded in rediscovering a sense of meaning and well-being all processed their tragedies the same way.

The Process

The first thing they did was to allow themselves to deeply and honestly feel the emotions surrounding their personal tragedy. They allowed themselves to feel their anger, their rage, their sorrow, their grief, their sense of irrecoverable loss.

I’m sure that every one of them felt that they were victims in the immediate wake of whatever circumstance disrupted their lives. But none of them allowed themselves to be defined by what had happened. Each of them set an intention to regain a meaningful and satisfying life.

And it was that intention that gave them the will to go on. They activated it by looking for meaning, for an understanding of how their new circumstances fit into their lives—the second step in the powerful, healing “recasting” process.

They asked themselves a lot of questions and looked for sincere answers.

First they explored the question, “What’s the essential core of my feelings?” They wanted to get to the very heart of their feelings, to let themselves understand. Sometimes they wrote letters to others involved—often with no intention to mail them—or they wrote about their feelings in a journal, or talked into a voice recorder, or to a caring friend.

The richer your understanding of your feelings, Hicks and Foster say, the richer the meaning you can derive from the event.

The second step of their healing was to ask themselves things like:

What am I learning about myself from this experience?

What am I learning about the others involved?
About my relationships with them?
About my relationships in general?

What story am I telling myself about this?
Is it true? From what other perspective could I see this?
What’s a different story I could tell?

What’s the gift in this?
What new opportunities for the future can I create from this experience? How can I take action on them?

The turning point comes when you look your emotions right in the face and decide, “I can cope. I can work through this pain.”

 It’s the willingness to face your pain that rescues you from the numbness of denial. It allows you to be authentic—honest with yourself—and in control. It reaffirms your centeredness and capability. And once you have those things, you’re more than half way to rebuilding a vibrant, satisfying, meaningful life.

Next week we’ll look at discovering new options for happiness, both now and when everything you once had seems to have disappeared.

Until then, I wish you a week free of trials and full of joy.

Warmly,
Susan

Image by sippakorn yamkasikorn from Pixabay

Stepping Stones

Walk into the world trusting,
even when you don’t know how to go.
Each step opens to the next,
and the Yes will guide your way–
tugging your sleeve, posting signs,
singing tunes, ringing bells,
placing stepping stones across the rivers.
Are not the rivers themselves led
to find their way to the sea?

The Taste of Late Summer

I noticed again this morning
how the forest has turned
from emerald to jade, a sign
of the leaves’ preparation
for the coming grand farewell.
So soon? Ah, yes.
Here and there, I spot
yellow leaves dancing with
the green, a trial red leaf
fallen to the ground,
and vines tinged crimson
climbing up the trees.
But today, as I drove around
a bend, a sea of gold tumbled
down to the edge of the road,
splashing summer all over my face.
I licked the sunshine, warm
as honey, from my lips
and its sweet taste lingered
all the way home as I drove
through a tunnel of jade August trees.

Holly in Summer

You have to know where she is,
the way the bittersweet vines drape
themselves around her, the way
she blends with the lush green
neighbors and all. Otherwise
you might walk right on by, never
noticing how glossy her leaves,
how sharp and deeply green.
To miss such a mystical being
at the height of her summer peak
would be a loss. Come, my friend,
I’ll show you.

Deeper Hints

I’d noticed a red-tinged leaf here and there
on the vines over the past couple weeks
and the first flowering of goldenrod
along the roadside. I pretended
they were anomalies and ignored them
as best I could. But today the hints
of summer’s end were undeniable.
The trees are beginning to turn.
I imagine them in their crimsons
and golds beneath an autumn sky
and smile in anticipation of the coming
splendor. Yet summer’s warmth
is wrapping me in its comfort
and green fragrance, and inside me
I hear something cry,
“Don’t go! Don’t go! Don’t go!”

Damaged Goods

Walk through the world with compassion.
Whether it shows or not, all of us are damaged goods.
Train your gaze to fall more on the good than the injury.
Butterflies still fly with broken wings, still offer
their gifts to the world. So can you. So can I.
Did you know that some butterflies drink tears?
It’s true. Proof that the Yes is made of love.

Think Peace

Think peace. It will change you.
Let it float through your mind
as a soft, gentle breeze.
Think hope. Let it rise up
like the first mists of dawn.
It will lift your heart.
Think kindness. Let it
flow from your eyes,
touching all that you see.
Kindness will change you.
Think forgiveness. Think grace.
Walk through the world
whispering thank you,
whispering Yes.
Watch as it all transforms.

Teachers

Sweet little babies, I see you there
lining the edge of my garden
with your blossoms no bigger
than my pinkie nail.
I see you, rollicking with laughter
just because there is sun
and the fun of beaming
for yet another day.
And yet you beam, I’ve noticed,
even when there’s rain.
I forgot your name years ago,
when I first tucked you
in the ground. Since then
I’ve seen you weather
frost and drought and snow.
I think it’s your joy that does it.
Would you laugh even more
if I told you that now I fondly
address you as“Teach?”

Happiness Front and Center

A few weeks back, I challenged you to rate your happiness level on a scale of 1-10. Remember?

Since then, we looked at the choices that genuinely happy people make and I invited you to make those choices, too.

The first one was to decide that yes, you truly wanted to live a life in which you felt contented, capable, and centered—our working definition of “happy.”

The second choice was to decide to dedicate yourself to being happy, to make it your intention, and to practice—before you got out of bed in the morning— imagining yourself being happy as you carried out the activities of the day ahead.

The third step was to accept that you and you alone are accountable for your happiness, that you have to give up blaming anyone or anything else for its lack in your life.

Then, last week, I invited you to identify what kinds of things contributed to your happiness, to create a personal “happy list” of things that brought you contentment, satisfaction, or joy.

Today we’re going to talk about “centralizing” your happiness. Grab your “happy list,” or, if you didn’t make one, have some fun: Take a few minutes to jot down everything you can think of that you enjoy, then come back.

Got your list? Good. Read it over and see if there’s anything else you’d like to add. Now go over the list and mark the things you already enjoy fairly often in your life. Those are the things you have already “centralized.” You’ve made them important enough to make time for them.

Now look at the things that you didn’t check, and ask yourself, “What’s keeping me from doing some of these more? How can I add a couple things?”

That’s an important question, by the way. What is keeping you from doing more of the things that let you feel happy? Is your answer the truth? Or is it an excuse you’re accepting from yourself?

What would you have to do in order to have more of those things you enjoy in your life? What if you did it? How could you start experiencing more of those things, or parts of them, in your life right now?

Give yourself some time to mull it over, to figure out a way to enrich your life with more of the things that bring you joy.

People figure out ways even when they thought they didn’t have the time, or health, or funds, or freedom.

Start by imagining tucking more happiness in your pockets. How would it feel? How much energy would it add to your life? Then keep imagining it, over and over, and over. Imagining it rewires you; it creates new possibilities; it unveils opportunities and ignites new ideas. Once the image becomes real to you, surprising doors open.

Happiness isn’t an accidental phenomenon. It blossoms when you nurture its seeds. Putting the things that you enjoy front and center in your life is the way you water those seeds and give them light.

If you think your circumstances are preventing you from making your life a thriving happiness garden, stay tuned. We’ll deal with ways to overcome the seemingly insurmountable obstacles next week.

In the meantime, go over your list again and pick a few things to centralize in your life right now. Make the time. Make the effort. You deserve it.

Wishing you a week of enrichment and fun!

Warmly,
Susan

Image by Ian Lindsay from Pixabay

At the Lake after Rain

Clouds were clearing before I got to the lake,
the light returning after a long rain. Mine
was the only car in the parking lot. Not
a soul was in sight. Only this broad lake
mirroring sky and the curves of hills,
and the washed summer air and a sky
brushed with watercolor clouds. I stood
in the damp sand a long while breathing it,
everything else gone. Only this.
Not even me.