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MARCH
2003 |
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THRIVING
IN DIFFICULT TIMES
by
Bernie Siegel, MD
What
makes anyone exceptional? Simply stated, they show up! They take
the time necessary to find the answers, discover their purpose for
living and when things get off track, they search for new ways to
march onward with renewed enthusiasm.
Whenever
anything went wrong in our family, my mother's comment was always,
"It was meant to be. God is redirecting you. Something good
will come of this." We learned that good things often came
into our lives as a result of our difficulties. Our minds and lives
remained open to the future and its new possibilities.
Let
me share with you some insights for thriving in difficult times.
The vast majority of people complain that life is unfair, but since
we are all complaining, it must obviously be fair! We all have difficulties.
Life is not unfair, but oftentimes it is difficult. When you know
how to use the dark times, you can turn charcoal into diamonds or
an irritation into the core of a pearl. You can also change your
life.
When
I lecture, I hold up a white piece of paper with a black dot on
it and ask the audience to tell me what they see. The closer you
get to New York City, the more time people spend describing the
black dot. Finally I tell them that I am holding a white piece of
paper with a black dot on it. The paper is a symbol of everyone's
life. We all have black spots, but remember, there is a big area
of white around it too. We alone decide what to focus on in our
lives. When you learn to live in the moment, as children and animals
do, life becomes a more joyful experience.
Some
of us create compost and enhance our personal growth while others
live in the darkness of fear filled with statistics and visions
of future problems that might occur. I have many letters from professionals
who say, "Thank God I have cancer" or "Cancer is
a blessing." What they mean is that they are happy they didn't
die suddenly of a heart attack because now they spend more time
with their loved ones and are able to experience compassion and
love. To clarify, let me offer you the following:
Insight
number 1: Accept your mortality and don't wait for a disaster
to awaken you to the value of your lifetime. As a child with cancer
once said, "Don't wait for a tragedy to occur before you tell
your family you love them and you're glad they're alive."
Insight
number 2: Learn from those who have preceded you and given you
guidelines for thriving in difficult times. All the great sages
of the past have shared their wisdom, but how often do you read
their inspiring words? We say, "don't fix it if it isn't broken"
but that isn't good advice. Too many of us break and then have to
become strong at the broken places because of the addictions, illnesses
and tragedies we learn to overcome. I suggest you become strong
beforehand and resist breaking. Look for the common themes of cancer
survivors, AA groups, spiritual leaders, Marines and many others
who have learned the qualities of survivors.
To
summarize: action, wisdom, devotion and meditation are the keys
to self-transformation.
Answer
these questions to determine if you have discovered your survivor
personality:
Do you have a sense of meaning in your life and activities?
Do you express anger appropriately in defense of yourself?
Do you ask for help from family and friends when you need it?
Do you say no to the things you do not want to do?
Are you the one who decides what prescriptions are appropriate for
you?
Do you have enough play in your life?
Do you deal with depression and pain appropriately?
Are you living a role to the detriment of your own needs?
And most importantly, are you dealing with your feelings and letting
them help you decide what choices to make?
An
attorney once said that after a tragedy he came to a conclusion
that was, "eminently reasonable, totally logical and completely
wrong" because, "while learning to think, I almost forgot
how to feel."
Let
me share the words of some "natives" who can help you
deal with difficulties through their wisdom. I learned a lot in
the year I thought one of our children was going to die of cancer.
I hadn't learned to live one day at a time and our seven year old
said, "Dad, you're handling this poorly." I knew I was
because no one had prepared me! So go and talk to the natives who
have lived the experience. Remember you don't live a diagnosis,
you live an experience. Most physicians are "tourists"
until they or their loved ones get sick and then they write books
about their education. As physicians, we learn medical information,
but we do not receive a medical education that will help us deal
with our feelings and experiences.
From
a native:
"In
the east a railroad track running from the valley of my arm to the
hilltop of my breast.
In the west a creek bed curving along the ridge of a rib.
It is not a perfect landscape, unfit for calendars, postcards or
brochures, but my husband is blind to the surface flaws and I see
myself through his eyes¾ the eyes of a native who overlooks
things that only a tourist would notice."
A
woman from Texas shares a poem:
"I grew up in Texas where you learn about hurricanes, rattlesnakes,
droughts...and where you learn how to ride things out."
So
living in Texas prepared her for difficult times and cancer.
Remember
that white piece of paper with a black dot. What if you were just
a blank white piece of paper or canvas, a work-in-progress? We must
realize we are not just our physical bodies. Trees need pruning
to survive and so do we at times. Animals know they are not valued
for their bodies.
As
a veterinarian said before her mastectomy:
"I
have learned so much from animals. I can amputate a leg or half
of a jaw and they awaken and lick their owners' faces. They are
here to love and be loved and teach us a few things."
A three-legged dog named "Tripod" has no self image problems!
From
another native:
"Seeing
myself in the mirror it is not as though I lost my breasts to surgery.
They seem instead to have been erased or painted over as though
the artist changed her mind. But see there are other changes too¾
the shoulders back, the head held higher, the brightness in the
eyes, the air of expectancy, listening with keener ears, observing
with greater insight. Do we perhaps shed things as we go through
life that other features may be enhanced? The canvas is not finished.
There is more color on the palette."
Yes,
we are works of art that need continuous sculpting. We are a process,
not a product. We are enabled not disabled. Love is the great healer
and force that changes the lover and the loved, but there is something
else that survivors know: building a life of love helps hold us
together. The cement is laughter. Healthy, childlike humor is always
appropriate. A simple example for you to practice: when you are
given a credit card slip and told to sign at the bottom write "At
The Bottom" and hand the slip back. If "Nobody is Allowed"
go in and say you're a nobody. If the sign says "Wet Floor"
well, you know what to do.
See
the world through a child's eyes and you will find things to laugh
at that sustain you. My wife, Bobbie, does stand up comedy and one
of her lines is, "Never consider yourself a failure. You can
always serve as a bad example."
Remember
we are all here for a limited time. How much of it are you willing
to spend being unhappy? As Carly Simon sings, "I haven't got
time for the pain." In the time of your life, live well and
remember that life is a series of beginnings, just as a graduation
is a commencement not a termination. Now begin to thrive, not just
survive. As one woman who did a number of things she loved to do
in preparation for dying wrote, "I didn't die and now. I'm
so busy, I'm killing myself." Burn up, not out and remember
to take a nap when you need one.
I
leave you with my Prescription for Living the rest of your Life:
Practice Faith, Hope, Peace and Love.
Receive and give liberal doses daily.
Renew as necessary by taking time to savor
what you have created.

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