It's got a lot of complicated subplots but it
all boils down to trying to figure out how to lead a better life -- one
in which I'm not so dark, stormy and crazy. I know I can be a bitch, but I
want to know how can I be less of one, and do work that benefits others
and not just myself. And, yes, I have to earn a living that supports myself and
my family -- a big challenge in these topsy-turvy times.
Throughout all this I have -- ugh -- begun to
believe that kindness, generosity and optimism are not just keys to a better
life; they can be the keys to survival.
I'm a slow, resistant student especially when
it means giving up long-held routines for doing and being. For example, someone
I'll call an adviser suggested a few months ago that I start making a short
list each night before bedtime. This list would name three or more things that
happened in my day for which I'm grateful.
A gratitude list. I bristled at the idea, even
though it didn't seem like such a horrible thing to do. Actually it seemed
pretty simple. Still, I resisted. I just couldn't see how making a short
gratitude list before bedtime would make much difference.
My friend made this suggestion after hearing
me talk about how I was walking up, sometimes in the middle of the night,
filled with dread: about finding work and income; future tripping about winding
up old, poor and alone. I would also be flooded with feelings of sadness of
regret. If only I had done such and such when I was 30, 35 or 40 -- well, my
life wouldn't be the mess -- or what I perceive to be the mess -- it is today.
She said the short exercise of making the
list before bed might put my brain -- before it goes into sleep mode -- into
a more positive mindset. If I went to bed focused on all the good things in my
life, I might not wake up agonizing over all areas in which I think that I
am failing.
Still, I resisted. I thought, it sounded like
just a bit more work I had to do. Already, I tend to
spend many big and small chunks of an entire day working to maintain a
positive, kind, optimistic outlook. Sometimes I have to expend quite a bit of
energy and do a lot of mental re-jiggering -- remembering, for example,
to take 10 deep breaths to pull myself away from that mental swamp of
irritability, hopelessness and despair. So, since I'm doing all
this Power of Positive Thinking crap all day long, I was feeling I deserved to
finally chill in the evening. I just wanted to zone out and watch some bad TV
or read a fun magazine. I didn't want to have to think any more.
But then, a few weeks ago, The New York Times
magazine published
a fascinating story "Post-Traumatic Stress's Surprisingly Positive
Flip Side." The story's focus was on the resilience of soldiers who lived
through traumatic combat incidents, such as a deadly roadside bombing in Iraq
that left one soldier with a brain injury. Actually, these soldiers didn't just
survive these incidents, they thrived. "This whole experience has
helped me to be more open, more flexible,” the brain-injured soldier Sgt.
Jeffrey Beltran told the Times. “I am branching out to activities that I
was once uncomfortable with.” The article also says Beltrans is pursuing
promotion, taking online courses towards a bachelor's degree and discovered a
sense of spirituality. He's gone through a divorce but remarried and
reconnected with his parents.
The article references the idea that people
grow in positive ways from hardship: "That which doesn't kill me makes me stronger." Now, scientists have been taking a serious look at
this idea of resilience: how people who live through adversity emerge with a
renewed appreciation for life, more personal strength and improved personal
relationships. And, they also feel more satisfied in their spirituality.
The U.S. military, dealing with more than 1
million soldiers returning from protracted wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, has
taken a serious look at studies on resilience. With the University of
Pennsylvania, the army two years ago launched a program called ComprehensiveSoldier Fitness Program to teach soldiers how to be emotionally and
psychologically strong.
A key aspect of this fitness training is to
cultivate gratitude and teach soldiers to "Hunt the Good stuff." In an
article on the army's U.S. Army's website, Ballard says "hunting the
good stuff is something that we can do everyday and it helps to build our
optimism."
"Research shows that if you're an
optimistic person you're going to live longer, you're going to be
happier," he continues. "What we are trying to do here is to allow
soldiers to make sense of what is happening, focus on what they can control,
and not catastrophize and go into a downward spiral."
Throughout the training, NCOs are asked to
keep a daily "three blessings" or gratitude journal, according to a
study on the Penn Army Master Resilience Training. Each morning, the NCOs are
asked to share something they "hunted" from the day before and reflect
on what the positive experience meant for them. The revelations might be
simple. One soldier might share how he had a great conversation with his wife,
another might explain how he learned a lot from a chat with a homeless
man.
But creating a habit of daily reflecting on
the good things -- big and small -- that happen in life can have positive
emotional and psychological benefits, the study concludes: "The research
on gratitude indicates that individuals who habitually acknowledge and express
gratitude derive health benefits, sleep benefits and relationships
benefits."
So, ever since reading that New York Times
Magazine story, I've been forcing myself to do my gratitude list and to do
it at night close to bed time. I mean, if it helps soldiers going into combat,
there might be something in it for me.
I usually list the things I'm grateful for. I
set the bar for listing three people or situations, but I usually end up
listing more. Perhaps the next step should be to reflect some more about how
these situations and people made me feel about what I've learned.
And, as the study promises, I have been
sleeping better, and I wake up less and less with those feelings of dread.
Through the day, I'm less likely to future trip or imagine looming
catastrophes. Instead, I'm better able to calm down, breathe and focus on
the things -- today -- over which I have control.
I'll keep trying to hunt the good
stuff.
5 comments:
You write and we will read...happy result all round.
Thanks very much Thud! Are you back in the Bay Area?
Years ago there was a weekly column in the CCTimes on the power of positive thinking written by Doug Hooper. He has since passed away but I remember that his words were a powerful influence on me and I'm sure on many others.
You started doing a "quote a day" a while back...maybe you could bring it back?... maybe one a week?
Martha, I'm back in W.C. sometime in mid July and believe me the family and I are counting down the days.
You go girl. I think your writing is still brilliant and you should be proud of the courage it shows. Haven't checked in for a while, but please keep it up. I still feel like I'll recognize you downtown some afternoon.
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