I’m not going to get all dictionary on you guys. The words I’m about to use, I’ll define by how I understand them. I’m gonna get totally subjective. You’ve been warned.
Despair, hopelessness, suicidal thoughts, self-destructive behavior, you know what I’m talking about. Life is a shit sandwich and every day is another bite. In other words, despair.
I like despair. I trust despair. I firmly believe that the worst possible thing will happen and we’ll all be killed and die and be killed some more, or we’ll be crippled, wounded, hurting, in pain beyond endurance. Yeah, despair is my buddy. Hello darkness, my old friend…
My default position is despair. I generally bypass sad and go straight for helpless, hopeless despair.
Do you know what I use to fight despair? Well, not fight, really. Any war I fight in my own mind, I always lose. I can’t fight my despair. Not a bit. It’s like the tar baby, or the blob, when I hit it, despair grabs my fist and pulls me inside it.
Instead, my despair is like a huge clockwork structure of madness and sorrow. But I have a screwdriver to dismantle it, and that tool is called gratitude.
I had a spiritual adviser who taught me about gratitude. Let’s define gratitude as finding a hundred dollars in your coat pocket when the rent is due. Or when you’ve lost your wallet, and someone has turned it into Lost and Found with all the cash tucked away. Gratitude is that feeling of having been gifted. Gratitude. Thankfulness. Thank God I didn’t get in that car accident this morning. Thank God I didn’t send that scathing email. Thank God.
Gratitude.
So back a while ago, when I was trapped in my clock tower of despair, I called my spiritual adviser, and before you think it was some guru on a mountaintop, my adviser was a shower glass installer. He had thick fingers, dead-skinned white knuckles, and dirt in the lines of his palm. But he was my guide and he was very, very wise.
My heavy-glass guru listened while I complained about life, about my sad, mad sorrows, and he said, “Aaron, be grateful you’re not on fire.”
I stopped. Yeah, I wasn’t on fire. Right now, where I’m at, in this second, I am not on fire. I’m not in great physical pain. I’m okay. Generally, for every minute I’ve lived, I’ve been okay. I’ve been relatively safe.
But I forget. My mind races. I regret the past and fear the future. I forget to be grateful of the little things.
And it’s the little things that either kill us or destroy us.
For example, at Starbucks I get coffee with steamed soy. It’s really good and only costs me $1.73. In the early morning, when I sit down in my special spot on the back wall by the window, and it’s dark outside, I sip my coffee-soy goodness, and then I get to work writing.
Life is sweet. Too bad I forget to be grateful for all the sweetness.
Hello Aaron – So true! In my house we were very sick last week. The sickest I’ve been for many years, and we forget how good *not sick* is. Anyway, one thing that struck me while I laid in bed chilled from fever was – Thank you for this bed. Thank you for these blankets. Oh my, I have never been so miserable and so grateful within the same breathes as I was last week. I hope I can hold on the the grateful for *not sick* the next time the darkness calls. 🙂
Mardra! Yes, that’s the trick, isn’t it? Being grateful for the *not sick* times. It’s so hard to remember. I get so caught up in the minutia of it all, and my selfish desires that are so, so fickle. I want a donut. I want to watch TV. I want a donut again. I don’t want to watch THAT on TV. My life is so hard. And all the while, I’m *not sick* and I’m not on fire!
Yeah, I, too, remember when I use to sit around thinking how bad off I was and then I had that stupid brain aneurysm and woke up and found out how REALLY bad off I was. Now I am in total pain 24 hours a day on methadone, which doesn’t really help the nerve pain, but they keep me on it, because morphine doesn’t do the trick, and if you think I get a buss from any of these drugs…think again…I DO NOT!!! I do not take them for the buss, I take them to STOP THE PAIN. My husband ask me one day, “Why can’t you just get use to the pain?”.
I wish I could. But you can’t get use to pain. Pain just never seems to become friend able…that doesn’t seem to make much sense…but that’s as close as I can come. That’s why one day I just decided to end it all until I had a little talk with God and He sent my twin over and she rushed me straight to my doctor’s office and demanded that he do something about my pain. I’m still here…so is my best friend…PAIN. It’s been almost 10 years and you know what? I am getting use to it…at least, I’m getting use to all the drugs. I’m a drug addict!!! In pain. At least I’m not suicidal, but I do welcome the day God calls me home…when-
ever that may be, the sooner the better. Kaye