Hello from Mile Marker 12,290...
Walking hasn't been so great.
Don't get me wrong. I'm SO glad to be back on my feet again -- going anywhere at all. Getting used to being in my prosthetic socket, with all its pressure points and pain, is just part of the process.
Still, it's been wearing me down.
On Saturday night, I call my friend Beth.
We've just received the tragic news that our friend Gary has passed away.
It is completely unexpected. He was our age. A physical therapist AND a firefighter. Smart. Caring. Brave. The kind of person our world needs more of.
We'd been friends a long time -- all the way back to our skating days. |
Beth and I feel the loss together. Reminisce about our many years in the skate club and how much things have changed since then.
I tell her I feel caught between wanting to do everything (because "life is short") and not wanting to do anything (because "life is hard").
How do we navigate a world like that?
Then Beth tells me about a man she knows from her hiking club.
He's in his 70's and always upbeat, despite aches and pains and rough terrain.
She asked him once how he stays so positive.
"Even on the worst days," he told her, "I try to find one thing that makes each day great."
He gave her some examples. (They were really small things!)
Beth and I laugh it off. It's probably not that simple.
But we start listing "great" things anyway -- things we usually take for granted...
A warm bed.
Food in the fridge.
We both know the truth: These are really big things -- and they prove how great we have it.
The next morning Beth texts me:
It's a great day because the sun is shining.
I look out the window. She's right.
And when I open the window, the air outside smells like spring.
That's when I notice my grandmother's begonia has a new brand-new bloom.
I snap a pic. Text it to Beth. |
That's THREE great things already -- and it's still early!
Without planning to, we start texting each other here and there, tossing small "great things" back and forth like a badminton game.
Mile 88,888 on her car's odometer.
Once you start noticing great things, they're everywhere! |