At the most stressful time of the year, Thanksgiving occurs.
It’s the busiest air travel holiday and millions of people return to family gatherings in the hope that a Norman Rockwell holiday will result.
I know people who spend months trying to come up with “excuses” to avoid a family disaster at Thanksgiving.
Others accept the invitation but make themselves miserable up to and including turkey day.
Next week, I will share with you the one thing that will guarantee gratitude and love even in the toughest situations. It works like a charm.
But one week out, it is helpful to remember that great expectations are not always possible with dysfunctional families, petty jealousies, marital problems, missing children spending the holiday with the other parent, sibling rivalries and even darker issues that sometimes affect families.
Yet gratitude is always possible once we grieve for the family we do not have.
I think this advice from Dr. Ana Nogales is very positive and uplifting at holiday time:
“After acknowledging what may be missing in our family relationships, each of us can then focus on the positive. Perhaps you had a good relationship with one of your relatives in the past, and you are working things out so that things may get better in the future. Maybe there is one family member with whom you have a special connection, with whom you feel free to be yourself. Or perhaps you have created a “family” with trusted and beloved friends, a group you feel more “related to” than the family into which you were born”.
Focus on being thankful to avoid unpleasantness.
Feel free to forward this email and share with your friends.
@Diane Cartwright All is forgiven. Your mother is in a better place and rooting for you and she is no doubt proud that you value the qualities she once had as your own.
As most daughters, in my youth, I fought the idea that I was “just like ‘your’ mother”. She was so colorful, different, stubborn, fun and strong-willed. Now, 10 months after losing her I do embrace her positive qualities, even her stubbornness and flare for being “different”, and I see so much of her in me. I find myself using little expressions she used all the while endeavoring not to lose my own unique personality. As my holistic doctor observed, “You can’t live your mother’s life. You have to live yours.” I do. I will, all the while carrying her with me in a special place of honor in my heart.
In the process of her disease she said some horribly hurtful things to me, but that was the disease talking. I have to remember the night she visited me in Seattle where I was working middays for KNUA. She looked at me and said, “You are everything I ever wanted to be.” I treasure that because she was everything I wanted to be.
Thanks to all of you for your comments.
I lost my dearest friend in the world two years ago December but I really started losing him 9 years earlier when he developed Alzheimer’s. Yet he knew me and his face lit up when he heard my voice. There is not a day that I don’t remember this kind man for being so person centered and I would like to keep his many great qualities alive in me to the extent possible. Somehow even trying makes it a little easier to accept the loss.
Thank you, Jerry. I lost my wonderfully beautiful, energetic, warmly loving, fun and mischievous mother 10 months ago from Alzheimer’s. Through all the devastation to her body and mind she never lost her smile, her essence, her passion for life. I felt it every day. It was a privilege to care for her right up until her last breath. To paraphrase Gandhi, she truly does live in my heart. She was my dearest friend.
All true. The death of a loved one is only a loss if you allow it to be. Gleening the trait of someone you lost and memories embraced sacredly can thrive in your heart if you let them , there to live forever.
NICE sentiment…very. And worth practicing.
Victoria