Gratitude and Hope
Here it is the end of November, the month when we focus on gratitude and I really haven't. This has been a very difficult year for me and my family. (Do I even have to say that?) Last year at this time I would have never have imagined that this is where I would be now. However, here I am. And even with the challenges that 2022 has had, I wanted to find the time to reflect on some blessings and hopes. So...
- This has been a stressful and challenging year, but I am grateful that I still have the time (make the time?) to sit down and write. In 2023 I will "celebrated" 10 years of blogging and I hope to continue for many more.
- I'm grateful for vegan bakeries and vegan options in
grocery stores. I am NOT vegan, but with my allergies, vegan cooking
is a true blessing. (Except to my waistline.) There seem to be
more and more vegan options and I hope that trend continues. I know
I will enjoy it!
- I am grateful for choir directors. Yes, I said
directors. As my son wraps up his senior year, he's had some great
music teachers. The current choir director has really thrown herself
into it over the past year and a half and I am amazed at what she has
done. I also sing in a church choir and we have recently welcomed a
new director who brings joy and energy that has been lacking in the group
for a while. We are small (and old), but I am so grateful for his
enthusiasm and I hope we are able to grow under his watch.
- I am grateful for good storytellers. When I have
been stressed out, nothing can take me away like a good book/story.
This year I have been enveloped by some wonderful stories that took me
away from the "real" world and immersed me in another
place. Old favorites like Stephen King, Jodi Picoult and Elin Hilderbrand were joined by new (to
me) one like Simone St. James, Bonnie Garmus and Katie Runde. (I'm sure these names and
their books will appear of my end of the year favorite books list.)
I hope they continue to carry me away for many years.
- I am grateful for my patio; a place where I can get
away from it all if only for a few moments. I appreciate the moments
of warmth, calm and relaxation that this small space as provided me and
that I have been able to share with friends. I hope to enjoy it for
many years to come.
- I am thankful that I am able to take my laptop out to
work on that patio during the warmer months. A change in scenery can
make all the difference in the world. Work is stressful, finding a
calmer place to deal with it helps. I hope to sit out there again
soon (how many days till spring?)
- I appreciate my friends who have supported me,
especially during this crazy year. I am blessed to be surrounded
with many special people (both near and far) and their love and support
was more evident and more needed than ever this year. I hope that I
am a good friend in turn. (And will try to do my best to be one.)
- Gratitude does not even begin to cover what I feel for
Andy. (He's the only person I'm going to mention by name as opposed
to letter because he's ANDY.) I've known him all my life and this
humble man has taught me more than he will ever know. If you ever
need a lesson in what being a REAL Christian is (and I mean living/acting
as Christ would), Andy is the person to see. I hope I am half as
kind as he is.
- I am grateful for those health care workers who took
care of my mom. I am especially grateful for T, a social worker, who
has become a friend. She guided me and continues to show me her
wisdom. She makes me be a better person; I hope to be as strong and
wise as she is.
- I am grateful for the live in care that my father
has. When my mother said she wanted/needed live in assistance to
help with my father last December, I wasn't sure it was necessary. I was
wrong. Having M in the house is beyond a blessing. And her
cousin, B, who filled in for her when she had to attend to her own family
crisis, was even more of one. They are everything I have hope for
and needed.
- On the flip side, I appreciate that I was allowed
myself to "disengage" from some toxic people in my life.
There is too much negativity in the world, I think I have finally achieved
enough wisdom (or am working towards it) to let those who want to bring me
down go.
- I am grateful to my manager, who is smart and caring
enough to have her staff work from home on days when the weather is going
to be bad. (I'm talking about later today.) I appreciate that she
supports her team with thoughtfulness.
- I am blessed with some co-workers who have become good
friends. Some of those people I have never actually met (they live
in different states), but have provided a safe place to vent and laugh.
How awful life would be without them. I hope they feel the same.
- Continuing in that vein, although I'm not a fan of the
commute, I'm grateful that it's only one day a week and hope that
continues into 2023 (but I do have a sinking feeling.) I'm thankful
that I am able to take public transportation (and appreciate when it is on
time) and that I can walk INSIDE to get form Penn Station to my office so
that once I am in Newark, I never have to go out and face the elements.
- If I have to be in an office, I am so grateful that I
am on the same floor as K, who works in the mailroom/supply room.
His smile and his good nature make the trek worthwhile. I
always seek him out; not for supplies but just to say hello because he
always brightens my day. I hope that I am or will be that person for
someone else.
- As always, I am grateful for my son's teachers, who go
above and beyond classroom education. They KNOW my son and have
taught him lifelong lessons. I am especially appreciative of those
who wrote letters of recommendation for him as he prepares for the next
stage of his life.
- Speaking of next stages, I appreciate those students
and counselors at the colleges we visited who took the time to get to know
my son. The reason why the top 5 on my son's list exist is because
of the true interest they showed in my son and our family. Now as we
wait for responses, I hope (and pray) that they are positive!
- As scary as it is, I am grateful that my son has a
driver's license. It has made MY life much easier (although more
expensive). That he drives what once was my mother's car is a
blessing and I know he gets more and more confident as he drives it.
(We haven't really reached highway status yet and with the GSP and
Turnpike is ANYONE ever ready?) I hope those who share the road will
be patient and remember their own first experiences.
- While the obtaining a driver's license was an
experience that I wouldn't wish on anyone, I do have to say how grateful I
am to those at the MVC in Lakewood, NJ when I had to transfer my mother's
car to my name. (I'm looking at your Mr. Window #5.) Why can't
they all be like that?
- I would not have been able to get to the MVC if it
weren't for Kelly's Sea Bay Service Center. They
did work for me so that I didn't have to...a true gift. They picked
up the car, inspected it, did maintenance and returned it to the
house. Yes, it was costly, but what car maintenance isn't?
(Especially after the car really hadn't been driven for a year.) The
convenience was worth every penny and I am glad to drive down to fill up
my tank when I am at the shore.
- Focusing more on customer service, my Fridays are
always a little brighter when V is our cashier at ShopRite. We always have friendly
banter when we check out, but it doesn't slow anything down, which makes
it all the better. Thank you V for being you.
- My day is always brightened by the folks at the Wawa on Route 35. (Corporate
claims they are in Lavallette; they are not.) I don't think I've
ever encountered anyone who works there who was not friendly, even when
the place is crazy in the summer. (And boy can it get crazy.) Thank
you! I hope that everyone who enters your doors appreciates you as
much as I do.
- I am grateful for holiday lights and decorations.
I hate the fact that it gets so dark so early and that the mornings are
dark as well. The lights and decorations brighten the darkness and
remind me of the true meaning of the season. (It's not all about the
gifts.)
- I am grateful for anyone and/or anything that makes me
laugh. We all need more laughter in our lives; I hope that we all
can find it.
- I'm grateful for my "happy place:" Skytop and that we were able to visit
several times a year. For me, this is a place of relaxation and
rejuvenation. There's something about it that refreshes my
soul. I hope that everyone has or can find "that place"
that truly makes them feel at peace. (A warm sunny day on the beach can
also make me feel this way.)
- I am grateful for the thrift shop where I volunteer AND
shop. I give AND receive there. I have made new friends
there. I know that the community is helped by it and I am so proud
to be a part of it.
- I am grateful for what I have: a roof over my
head, a warm bed, etc. I privileged to have what I need; something I
too often take for granted. I hope to focus more on what I do have
in 2023 and truly appreciate all my blessings.
- I am grateful for my husband, especially this
year. He's been an emotional support for me and I know I haven't let
him know how much it means to me. (Are you reading this?) I
hope I am as supportive to him when he needs it. We all need support
and help; having someone there to be that rock is essential.
- I am grateful for my son. (You know this was
coming didn't you?) He has become a wonderful young man (but there's
still room for more kiddo). He tells me he loves me just about every day
(you can never say it enough) and tolerates my hugs.
- I am grateful for so many things...too many to
list. But I am especially grateful that you are reading this.
That you took time out of your day to read what I wrote. I hope you
know that it means a great deal to me to know that somewhere out there
someone is reading this. I may know you; I may not...either way
THANK YOU
There's only one more month left in
2022. Maybe that's something we can all be grateful for. Or maybe
we could just enjoy the next 31 days and find joy in each and every one of
them.
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