"It seems almost too simple to be true, but acceptance -- accepting things exactly as they are -- can be the key that unlocks the door to happiness. After John 3:16, it may be one of the most quoted passages in literature. It's from Page 449 (first 3 editions, pg. 417 in the 4th edition) of Alcoholics Anonymous or The Big Book as it is widely known:
Nor does it mean that I have to accept "unacceptable behavior." Today I have choices. I no longer have to accept abuse in any form. I can choose to walk away, even if it means stepping out into the unknown. I no longer have to fear "change" or the unknown. I can merely accept it as part of the journey.
I spent years trying to change things in my life over which I was powerless, but did not know it. I threatened, scolded, manipulated, coerced, pleaded, begged, pouted, bribed and generally tried everything I could to make the situation better -- only watch as things always got progressively worse.
I spent so much time trying to change the things I could not change, it never once occurred to me to simply accept them as they were.
Now when things in my life are not going the way I planned them, or downright bad things happen, I can remind myself that whatever is going on is not happening by accident. There's a reason for it and it is not always meant for me to know what that reason is.
That change in attitude has been the key to happiness for me. I know I am not the only who has found that serenity."
Every now and then, I need to read this again. Slowly. And then again.
I need to accept the reality of my life, THIS LIFE that I have been blessed with, and not waste so much time imagining the life I could have.
It's so easy to peruse all the real estate listings of all the places I would like to live; country farms, camps on pristine lakes, cottages in little coastal villages.
And I suppose they aren't impossible.
But that's not the point.
This is where I live, and this is my reality. Life is too short to waste too much of it on what might be.
It's easy, too, to think that we don't need to change anything about ourselves. I think though, as long as we're alive, we are works in progress, and we can make conscious decisions to be better, smarter, kinder, bigger.
"What I want is what I've not got, what I need is all around me"........Dave Matthews.
- And acceptance is the answer to all my problems today. When I am disturbed, it is because I find some person, place, thing or situation -- some fact of my life -- unacceptable to me, and I can find no serenity until I accept that person, place, thing or situation as being exactly the way it is supposed to be at this moment. Nothing, absolutely nothing happens in God's world by mistake. Until I could accept my alcoholism, I could not stay sober; unless I accept life completely on life's terms, I cannot be happy. I need to concentrate not so much on what needs to be changed in the world as on what needs to be changed in me and in my attitudes.
Nor does it mean that I have to accept "unacceptable behavior." Today I have choices. I no longer have to accept abuse in any form. I can choose to walk away, even if it means stepping out into the unknown. I no longer have to fear "change" or the unknown. I can merely accept it as part of the journey.
I spent years trying to change things in my life over which I was powerless, but did not know it. I threatened, scolded, manipulated, coerced, pleaded, begged, pouted, bribed and generally tried everything I could to make the situation better -- only watch as things always got progressively worse.
I spent so much time trying to change the things I could not change, it never once occurred to me to simply accept them as they were.
Now when things in my life are not going the way I planned them, or downright bad things happen, I can remind myself that whatever is going on is not happening by accident. There's a reason for it and it is not always meant for me to know what that reason is.
That change in attitude has been the key to happiness for me. I know I am not the only who has found that serenity."
Every now and then, I need to read this again. Slowly. And then again.
I need to accept the reality of my life, THIS LIFE that I have been blessed with, and not waste so much time imagining the life I could have.
It's so easy to peruse all the real estate listings of all the places I would like to live; country farms, camps on pristine lakes, cottages in little coastal villages.
And I suppose they aren't impossible.
But that's not the point.
This is where I live, and this is my reality. Life is too short to waste too much of it on what might be.
It's easy, too, to think that we don't need to change anything about ourselves. I think though, as long as we're alive, we are works in progress, and we can make conscious decisions to be better, smarter, kinder, bigger.
"What I want is what I've not got, what I need is all around me"........Dave Matthews.
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