What
we do with these life-changing events, how we respond, is what is important.
And respond we must. We have no other choice. We can rejoice with the good and
lament with the bad, but we respond. And we respond by moving on with our
lives. Our lives are now changed forever. They will never be the same again.
The
euphoria from joyful events eventually dies down. As they say, the honeymoon
does not last forever. On the other hand, the sadness that comes from painful
changes and the pain itself does not mean that our life is over. We live on,
changed to be sure, but we live on. We can wallow in our misery and pain, but
we still must move on. Our lives will never be the same again.
But
they never were. Life-changing events are rare, few and far-between. Thank God
for that or else it would be difficult to even survive. Psychologists tell us that one life-changing
event at a time is difficult enough. It causes us great anxiety to our psyche
let alone what it does to our body itself. Two such events can be overwhelming.
Our
lives change every day. No two days are alike. They may be very similar but
they are never identical. We will never repeat yesterday and we will never
repeat today and tomorrow will be different than any day we have lived to date.
Sometimes we forget that truth. We are a changed person each day. Granted, we
may not be able to perceive the change, but we are changed.
Over
the long run the imperceptible daily changes can morph into a significant
change in who we are and how we live. Crash diets may work but they do not
last. We are not suddenly a different person the day after our marriage as the
day before. Life changes take time, often more time than we would wish that
they would take. But when give ourselves the time to change, to adapt to the
new day, the new life, the new way; when we do that, we grow.
“It
will never be the same again,” we may lament. But it never was. We cannot
freeze frame the joyful moment and live it forever nor can we excise the bad
moment as if it never happened. We simply move on to the next moment and the
next and the next dealing with what now is as best we can with the help of
God’s grace and the love and support of one another.
1 comment:
I have moved on. Going back just does not work for me. The old words no longer resonate. The Transcendent that was a felt presence has morphed into Walking in the Dark. I now feel clarity of paying attention to the moment-to-moment that simply is.
Celebrate beautiful life!
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