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With Gratitude the Glass Is Always Full

Is the drinking glass of your life half full or half empty?

Neither.

When you feel gratitude as a way of life your glass is always entirely full.

I recently read an article on how to achieve happiness. It cited pivotal research by Daniel Kahneman, winner of the 2002 Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences. Kahneman concluded that beyond a certain level of income (the study said $75,000), self-reported happiness does not increase with greater income. So happiness does not necessarily depend upon how much money you have.

Another researcher determined that happiness is fifty percent genetic (choose your parents carefully), and that there are just two major factors that lead to greater satisfaction in life.

Gratitude.

Helping others.

Today I’m thinking about gratitude. I remember the astute advice of a friend who suggested to me a few years ago, “Don’t ask why this is happening to you. Ask, instead, why is this happening for you?” In other words, look for the positive lesson in any experience.

I am grateful for fresh air, trees, and the scent of night blooming jasmine. I’m grateful for many friends, excellent health, and my ability to find a silver lining in any situation. I’m grateful that I was born in the mild climate of Los Angeles and that I have always been able to live here. I’m grateful for fine medical care, the availability of tasty and healthy food, and my capacity to contribute to society through my writing.

In the final chapter of my book People Tools for Love and Relationships I talked about J, a friend of mine who lives by herself in a rented mobile home in a forest in Harbor, Oregon. She was seventy years old at that time. When I visited her a few weeks ago, J was seventy-four.

The two of us sat in chairs on her front porch, talking for hours about our memories and our friendship of almost fifty years. In some respects J has led a difficult life. When she was young she was physically abused by her parents, leading to serious life-long trouble with her back. J is in pain every day, and at night she cannot sleep for more than two hours at a time. When she was fifteen J was kicked out of her home, carrying only a small suitcase. For the next six months she lived on the streets of Hollywood. Even so, J has always helped others with whatever small resources come her way.

When I lived with J for several years in the 1970’s she was often sad. But during our recent visits J has been in high spirits. She has seemed quite happy, despite her painful back and a heart attack a year ago.

I asked J, “What do you remember as the happiest time of your life?”

She answered immediately. “Right now. Today.”

J is grateful for everything. The forest, the sunset we shared, and our heartfelt conversation on her front porch. When I left we shared a lovely hug.

At the age of seventy-eight I no longer try to shape the world to be what I desire. To the contrary. I am simply grateful for the silver linings that I find everywhere I look.

Get in touch with your gratitude every morning, every afternoon, and every evening. And live your gratitude right out loud. Let others know what you appreciate about them.

When you do, your glass will be completely full. And it will stay that way.

Alan

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As the Twig Is Bent

by Timothy Green 2 Comments

I pay attention to words, and I’m especially sensitive to the subtleties of the positive and negative.

For example, the other day, I caught myself writing to a friend, “I can’t have lunch with you until I finish my next children’s book.”

I imagine that most of us would read that sentence without a second thought, but I revised it because I’d rather express myself in a positive way. I changed the sentence to:

“I look forward to having lunch with you as soon as I finish my next children’s book.”

Same message, but with a vastly different tone. Words such as “I can’t” or “I won’t” hit me in the face like a damp dishtowel. Words such as “I look forward to” and “I will” brighten both my outlook and my day.

When my children were young I taught myself to say, “I’d be happy to take you to the store as soon as you put the finishing touches on cleaning your room.” This is a “yes,” and my young children knew they were doing fine and had only a little bit of work to complete.

I could have said, “I’ve already told you twice that I won’t take you shopping if your room isn’t clean. Don’t ask me again until your room is clean. Totally clean.” If I said that I might have felt better for a moment about all of the other frustrations in my life, but to my children it would have sounded like a criticism, and that probably would not have gotten them to clean their room. Nor would I have gotten a warm and fuzzy response from a child I love.

There is a saying, “As the twig is bent, so grows the tree.” To prove this point you need look no further than the Monterey peninsula where the cypress trees, blown by strong onshore breezes, point away from the sea. Just like those trees, when you talk in positive terms you also think in positive terms, and you point both yourself and others toward happiness and success.

In writing my blog for the past five years I occasionally get stuck, and catch myself thinking, “I’m going to run out of time. This is hopeless.” But then I remember an old cartoon from the New Yorker. Two men are shackled hand and foot, facing each other, halfway up the very tall walls of a prison cell. The single window has bars, and is too small for either of them to squeeze through. Nevertheless, one prisoner is saying to the other, “I have a plan.”

He has plan, when most of us would have given up.

Each of us, every single day, is that onshore breeze bending twigs – the thoughts and attitudes of ourselves and others.

I’m going to have a very good day. And so are you.

Alan

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Enjoy Every Moment of Your Life

by Alan C. Fox 3 Comments

All of us are tempted to live anywhere but in the present moment.

We often dwell in the past, remembering triumphs or tribulations, pain or pleasure, from yesterday or years ago.

We are lured by the future.  We look forward to or dread what might happen tomorrow, next week, or years from now.

For several decades, however, I have practiced living in the present. It’s a state of mind, focused on being in the here and now.

Do I remember the past?  Of course, but only as a guide to the future. I don’t live in the past.  My father dated a woman for nearly ten years.  Every time I was with the two of them she talked about her former husband. She never moved out of the past and into the present. After six months of hearing the same talk I finally tuned her out.

I have a personal rule that in conversation with my family and friends I try to share only what has happened to me during the past two weeks.  I keep it current because I don’t want to repeat old stories and bore people.  I like to keep the dialog relevant to how we feel with each other right now, and what is happening right now.

Do I look forward to the future?  Absolutely.  But in thinking about or planning for the future, I remember that I am enjoying the planning, which is what I am doing in the moment. For example, at the end of this week I am traveling with my entire staff to Hawaii to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the founding of my company.  I smile whenever I think about the trip. I enjoy anticipating the celebration in the present moment.  In this way, I can enjoy thinking about the future while still staying centered in the present. I only think about the problems – renting a car, having a place to stay, etc., as needed to make the arrangements. Once those have been made I don’t think about them again.

When I was younger, I was taught by a politician friend of mine how you can hurry along a reception line.  You shake the hand of the person in front of you and pull him along while you look at the next person in line and say, “Hello.”  This means that you are always paying attention to the next person, not the one attached to the hand you are pulling. By rushing the reception line along you are living in the future. But why rush your life along? Why not connect with the person you are with in the moment,

Living in the present improves human connection. When you talk to me I am only doing one thing: listening to you intently.  I’m not thinking about what I should say next or what I will eat for lunch.  I’m not remembering what happened last night.  I am paying attention to you.  Right now.  The flip side to this is that I expect you to pay undivided attention to me when I talk, and not take out your iPhone to check the latest text you might have received.

I enjoy the person I’m with when we’re together, and I don’t miss people who aren’t here.  If I did, I would be living in the future.  Then, when that future arrived, when I saw them, I would be thinking about my next future and I would completely miss the benefit of seeing, hearing, and feeling everything that is taking place in my life right now.

So stop to smell the roses.  And then sneeze.  It’s all a part of life.

Alan

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