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Humbling My Heart

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I was on my way to help with Thanksgiving food box deliveries for people who had no means of transportation. 

When I arrived at the auditorium, the room was bustling with good-hearted people busily packing boxes.  Mountain of all types of food was stacked high on tables as far as the eye could see. I immediately jumped in and helped, then loaded my car with the deliveries.

My first stop was at an apartment complex inhabited by the elderly.  The lobby was filled with white-haired women very curious as to who I was and what I was doing there.  I made my way to the fourth floor where a tiny, fragile-looking woman in a worn quilted robe opened the door.  She smiled weakly as I entered her small, cramped apartment.  I noticed portable oxygen tanks on the floor and a walker propped in the corner. Her bent frame shuffled along showing me the way to a table on which to place the groceries. Her voice was no more than a whisper as she thanked me and mentioned her son might come over later for a visit.  I hoped that he would.

My second stop was at a worn, low income apartment complex. I was making two deliveries there, and as I entered the lobby, two women with apparent health issues met me in the lobby with portable shopping carts ready and waiting.  I had only one of the deliveries in my hands, and the woman receiving them protested that I should have food for her friend as well.  I looked at the sad face of the other woman and assured her that hers was in my car, and she would be next.  When I came back into the lobby, the woman smiled broadly and eagerly took the food from my hands.  She thanked me profusely and wished me a good day as she happily wheeled her groceries onto the elevator.

Stop three was in another apartment complex along a desolate country road.  I drove to the back where the woman had directed me, saying she would be working but her sixteen year old son would be home to accept the delivery.  The overweight boy came out in bare feet – his hair cut into a Mohawk, tattoos up his arms and silver rings in his ears.  I couldn’t help but question what the future would hold for him.  He took the box looking at the contents curiously.  I wondered what would be left by the time his mom came home from work, but I wished him well and hoped he would enjoy. 

My last stop was to a run-down trailer park.  In a word, it was shabby, and I don’t mean to be unkind.  A petite, dark-haired woman in her forties answered the door and eagerly took the box.  She questioned me about whether my organization could provide transportation for her since epilepsy prevented her from driving.  I told her I would have the counselor contact her to answer her questions.  I got into my car and drove off wishing I could have done more for h

I reflected on the gifts God has given me as I drove home. Although my finances were not great, I was driving my own car.  I had my health, a warm home to go to, food in the pantry and my family to love. I passed a church along the way with a marquee that said, “Whatsoever you do for the least of my brothers, that you do unto me.”   I may have delivered food today to people in need, but they, in fact, did something greater for me by humbling my heart.

Be Who You Must

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Thought for the day:  Be who you must – that’s a part of the plan.

Dan Fogelberg

Many years ago, when I was trying to figure out the rest of my life, I did a lot of soul searching and a lot of traveling.  During that time a new artist named Dan Fogelberg had just released his first big hit – “Part of the Plan.”  This song spoke to my soul and became my road song as I drove cross country to California trying to find myself.  Everyone seemed to be traveling to California in those days, as if it were some kind of promised land. I don’t think I ever really did – find myself, that is.  I’m still searching and still finding hope in this song. 

I have these moments

All steady and strong

I’m feeling so holy and humble

The next thing I know

I’m all worried and weak

And I feel myself

Starting to crumble

 

The meaning gets lost

And the teachings get tossed

And I don’t know what I’m going to do next

I wait for the sun, but it never quite comes

Some kind of message comes through to me

Some kind of message comes through

 

And it says:

Love when you can

Cry when you have to

Be who you must

That’s a part of the plan

Await your arrival

With simple survival

And one day we’ll all understand

When I start to worry (and I’ve been doing a lot of that lately), I make a conscious effort to choose faith over fear.  It’s only then that I become steady and strong.

P.S.  Thanks, Dan

 

Holy Guacamole!

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Megan at Rocco’s with the ultimate guacamole!

I had the undisputable pleasure of visiting Rocco’s Tacos and Tequila Bar in Ft. Lauderdale, Florida, during a recent visit.  If you’re ever in the area, you’ve got to check it out.  The food was estupendo, and the guacamole, prepared fresh at your table, was mucho magnífico!!!  Add a pitcher of prickly pear margaritas and you’re good to go!

I’ve been experimenting with guacamole ingredients ever since my return and have concocted one I think is pretty close.  Give it a shot and let me know.  Until I get back to Rocco’s again, this will have to do – in the meantime, all I can say is olé!

 ½ cup finely chopped red onion

2 cloves garlic finely chopped

2 Roma tomatoes diced

1 lime freshly squeezed

(Mix the above ingredients together and set aside.)

4 ripe Hass avocados peeled and seeded (cut in half – take out seed – scoop out flesh)

1 tbsp. salt

1 tsp. ground pepper

¼ cup firmly-packed chopped fresh cilantro

8 dashes hot sauce (Texas Pete)

(Mash avocados and add salt, pepper and cilantro and hot sauce.)

Mix chopped mixture into mashed mixture.  Add more salt if needed to your taste. Also, if you like it hotter, add more sauce or you can chop up a chili pepper (I didn’t use a chili pepper because I’m not a hotty :))

Let set a few minutes then serve with fresh chips. Store tightly covered but not for too long – it turns brown quickly.

Recipe by:  Mamasita Susezit

In The End

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Thought for the day:  The pure and simple truth is rarely pure and never simple.

I was driving my friend home after visiting with her dad in the hospital.  He was battling squaemous cell cancer and lymphoma.  The once strong, virile, opinionated man now lay fragile and weak, barely able to lift a fork to feed himself.  His face was distorted from surgery.  Tubes hung from his arms.  It was sad to see him struggling to be the man he used to be, trying to chat and joke, only to lose his grip to the sleepiness that randomly overtook him.  It was hard to watch.

My friend was exhausted from the emotional roller coaster.  She asked me as she blankly stared out into the darkness, “Remember how you told me that even though your parents seemed to always be fighting and never seemed to get along, that when your dad got sick the confrontations stopped – that your mom doted on him as if she couldn’t survive without him?”  I nodded because I remembered it well.  She continued to relate that her parents were the same way, and now she was having trouble understanding.  She asked me why I thought it was that even though she and her father had a rocky father/daughter relationship, much like my father and me, that you put it all aside when they get sick.  They were not easy questions to answer.

I escaped into deep thought before I answered. My parents didn’t seem to have a good marriage.  They seemed to be nothing more than roommates – people who lived together and tolerated each other.  They fought about stupid, irrelevant things.  My dad had a quick temper and my mother knew which buttons to push to set it off.  She almost seemed to relish that power she had over him.  And yet, when he got sick, she was always by his side, getting him whatever he needed or just sitting quietly watching him.  When he died, I thought that maybe it would be freeing for her.  That now she could relax and enjoy her life without all the bickering and tension that always seemed to be in the house.  But instead, she plummeted onto a downward spiral of depression, eating little and mixing up or not taking her medicines correctly, even though she was well able to do so.  We didn’t realize this until it was too late.  My mom was admitted to the hospital for dehydration four months after my dad died, even though we thought we were keeping a watchful eye on her.  I then prepared a place in my house for her to live so I could help her, of which she was in agreement.  On the morning I was to pick her up to bring her home, the hospital called to say she had taken a turn for the worse.  By the time we arrived, she had died.

You don’t realize how fragile life is until the shadow of death is looming.  When you find yourself in that position, all the trivial stuff disappears.  All you remember and hold on to is the very basic thing, and that is that your parents loved you. They loved you the only way they knew how to.  And right or wrong, good or bad, they did the best they could, even if you thought they could have done better.  The confrontations they had with you were probably caused by the fact that they did love you and wanted more from you and a better life for you.  They didn’t want you to go off and put yourself in danger or be in relationships that they thought would hurt you.  And instead of communicating that to you, they instead expressed their anger and tried to bully you out of it.  That, I think, is how that generation was.  There was no talking it out like there is today.  Raising children was very different then, and a child’s opinion didn’t matter. There was a pompous arrogance about a parent’s position of authority – they knew best, and you had better accept it or else!  That’s the only way they knew how to be. 

You don’t come to this level of acceptance of the way your parents were until you are well into your adulthood.  It is only then that you begin to understand why they said and did the things they did.  And the why is rarely pure and never simple but boils down to the fact that they loved you.  And in the end, that’s all that matters.

Worth It

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Megan, Me and Katie

I had a text from my daughter Megan this morning.  She’s engaged and living in Florida with her fiancé Matt who is a wonderful man.  She has a great job and a good life.  My older daughter Katie is also engaged to a good guy Blake.  They are happy as well, and I’m so proud that both of my girls are not afraid to take a chance on love.

Meg said:  Good Morning…had a dream you and I were sight seeing on the Golden Gate Bridge, and I was terrified of heights.

I answered:  I’m terrified of heights, but the bridge is worth it. (I saw the bridge when I was in San Francisco years ago, and it is a magnificent sight to behold.) 

What does this mean?!  I ask her.

She answers:  U weren’t scared of heights in the dream!  I dunno?!

I say:  Maybe I’m willing to take a chance now without being afraid.  How about U?

She says:  U showing me not to be afraid of anything.

I answer:  Crying…

She says:  Why am I doing that lately?!  Love U to be happy.

I say:  I am.  

I’ve been through hell and back in the last couple of years both emotionally and financially.  I’ve lost mostly everything I built in the past 30 years, but I’m still standing.  I am still strong and most of all, still hopeful.  If showing my daughters not to be afraid of anything is what’s come out of all that I’ve been through, then it was worth it.

My First Crush

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Thought for the Day:  Don’t be afraid to let your freak flag fly. Life is way more interesting when you do.

It was September, 1968. I was entering high school as an awkward freshman with a thing for musicians, discovering boys for the first time.  He was a junior – a trombone player in the school band and a member of a popular dance band. 

It was my first school assembly, and as we gathered into the stuffy gymnasium, the school band started playing. I glanced through the group of musicians, and my eyes settled on the conservative boy with dark slicked hair, staring at the sheet music through brown horn-rimmed glasses.  Badda bing, badda boom went the strings of my heart – Jimmy Galienski, my first crush.

To see him in the halls of the school was delirium for me.  With my long light brown hair perfectly combed and lips slathered in cherry lip gloss, I would see him coming towards me amid the bustle of a gazillion students, and I would shout loudly “Hi, Jimmy!”  He looked at me with dubious recognition and mumbled hello. 

WOW – he said “hello!”  I ran home from the bus stop that afternoon and immediately called my best friend June who went to a different school, and together we had an hour-long conversation on the exact circumstances of how Jimmy Galienski said hello to me in the hallway.  “Did he smile when he said it?” June asked.  Did he wave?  Nod his head?  Was it a loud or soft hello?!  She grilled me like a detective and cross-examined me on every aspect of the encounter. 

Each day from thereon was determined to be good or bad by the seeking and sometimes finding the elusive Jimmy in the corridors of the school and saying hello to him.  Sometimes I would alternate with “How are you, Jimmy?”  He would look at me blankly and respond simply, “Fine.”  Home to the phone for a one and a half hour conversation with June on how he said “fine!”  How did he say it?  Was he happy?  Sad?  Did he look into your eyes?  All seriously probing questions.

Sometimes he would answer with, “How ya doin’?” 

“June, he said “how ya doin’?”

 “OMG!!  How are you doing?” June shrieked.  He wanted to know how YOU were doing?  He MUST like you.” 

“You think?” I ask her smiling at the concept that a quasi-popular musician would actually like me.

“Absolutely,” she assured me.  This phone conversation will last at least two hours.

But the next day he’s back to “hi,” again, so I’m not quite sure if I am making any progress and am uncertain of whether he likes me like I like him or not.

I started dragging June and my other friend Debbie to all the football games since Jimmy played in the band at halftime. He looked quite spiffy in his band uniform. I hate football but went to every game that year just to catch a glimpse of Jimmy at half time.  After the fourth game, my friends grew tired of going since they didn’t like football either.  But I pleaded with them in the name of love, and they eventually decided on whom they liked out of all the football players and the band so they could have a reason to attend as well.  Debbie kind of liked a trumpet player named Phil, but he was obnoxious answering her with a burp when she said hi to him in the hallway. Really not a nice fellow at all.

We became a gaggle of groupies for Jimmy’s dance band and started tracking them wherever they played, usually school dances.  June eventually developed a crush on their lead singer, and Debbie liked the drummer, so we became in sync on why we were doing this groupie thing.

Eventually Jimmy miraculously found out my name. Sometimes he’d say, “Hi, Sue.”  That just catapulted me into outer space.  Then I asked my brother to tell him I liked him, since he was in one of his classes, which my brother somehow agreed to do. Probably because I grilled him every day on whether or not he told Jimmy that I liked him, and he got sick of my asking.

When my brother told him, Jimmy blandly answered, “Yes, I know.”  My brother was intrigued at how nonchalant Jimmy was about it, since he himself was not very cool with anything pertaining to girls at the time. 

“He knows,” I tell June.  “Now he knows!”  We scream into the phone in unison.  This is an all night conversation, which ends only when our parents force us off the phone because we need to get some sleep.

Even with the knowledge that I like him, Jimmy continues his usual blandness and never reacts other than a “hi” or “how ya doin’?” This continues through the school year. I eventually found out he apparently had a crush on the girl singer in his own band, although she was dating someone else.  Eventually my crush on Jimmy fizzled, but I held that torch for a very long time. I finally realized the “relationship” would never past the “hi” or “how ya doin’?” stage. 

Summer came, and I got busy having other crushes anyway, mainly on one boy named Ronald who surfed, whom June and I were fighting over, even though he didn’t really know either of us existed.

The last time I saw Jimmy was a couple of years later at a graduation party of a friend of a friend’s who was a year older than I. I was a junior at the time, and feeling like a hot shot, especially since I was invited to an upperclassman’s party. 

June and I spent days deciding what to wear and what our game plan would be so we could act mature at the party and fit in. We went to the party decked out in wide striped bell bottoms and scarves wrapped around our heads.  You have to remember it was the early seventies. I remembered feeling very hip and cool.  That was until I tripped over a chaise lounge and stumbled on top of an upperclassman knocking the chair and him to the ground.  He threw his soda can on the ground and yelled inappropriate obscenities.  My fair complexion turned a bright red.

It was just about then that I spotted Jimmy across the crowded back yard.  He had just finished his first year of college and now had shoulder length hair and looked like a hippy, which was very trendy at the time.  Even in my embarrassed state, I remembered the heartache of his ignoring me during that vulnerable time in my freshman year by only saying “hi” or “how ya doin’,” so I ignored him even though I could swear he was watching me. 

June and I decided to leave because I was humiliated over the tripping incident, and our confidence level in this group of upperclassmen was beginning to plummet. Amazingly, Jimmy said hello to me as I passed him on the way out, but for some odd reason I just walked past him without responding and pretended I didn’t know him. In hindsight I wished I’d said a bland, “how ya doin’?”

Flash forward quite a number of years.  Out of boredom, I am searching a few names on Facebook and I plug in Jimmy Galienski.  His face instantly shows up, and surprisingly, a butterfly flutters in my stomach.  Are you kidding me? I chided myself, annoyed that he still had that power over me.  But there he was looking a little different then he did at 16, but so did I.  I google the webpage he has listed on and read his bio, which proved him to have had a pretty interesting life.  He stayed in the music business. I’m blown away.  The “send Jimmy a message” icon beckons me.  Should I? I ask myself.  I feel a little anxious but start typing:  You were my freshman crush, but I was probably nothing more than a pain in your patut.  Glad to hear of your accomplishments.  Best wishes for continued success.  My heart is racing as I write this to him just as much as it did every time I spotted him walking towards me in that school corridor so many years ago.

The “send” button entices me. Should I send it or not?  I asked myself. I wish I could talk to June right now, but we’ve lost contact.  I imagined she would scream, JUST DO IT!  Jolted by the thought, I bravely hit the “send” button. For the rest of the day I was bubbling over but didn’t dare tell anyone.  What if he never wrote back or, even worse, wrote back something like, “Leave me alone you creepy little freshman stalker.”   I checked my Facebook page again and again that day, but there was no response.  That night I was feeling both elated at the prospect of hearing from him and forlorn that he might ignore me like he used to way back when.  I was pleasantly surprised that I was recalling the humor of the old days and wondering like a school girl if he would write back.

I rushed to my computer the next morning and screeched when I saw “A message from Jimmy Galienski.”  I opened it with blinding speed.

Susan, great to hear from you.” (from me?, I smile to myself)

“Freshman year?”  he continues, “you make me blush.” (My heart is bursting.)

“I’m still in the music business,” he continues. (My imagination is running 100 miles per hour.)

Will you be going to the school reunion?” he asks. (OMG!!!!  Is he asking me in a nondescript way to meet him at the reunion?!? This would definitely be an all day conversation with June had I still had her number.)

 I answered him:  “No.  I won’t be going to the reunion.  I actually graduated from another school – transferred in my junior year.  But I’m glad you followed your heart with your music, Jimmy.

I could use my imagination to make up a great story on how Jimmy and I connected through Facebook and an endearing love affair followed.  But it didn’t.  I never heard from Jimmy again.  Maybe he couldn’t get the idea of that geeky, annoying freshman girl out of his mind.  But I’ll always be grateful for the blast from the past and the remembrance of what a crazy kid I was as I boldly reached out to my first crush and felt the twitter of puppy love for the first time.

Skylar the Survivor

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Thought for today:   What’s life without a risk or two?

It was sweltering July day, and the pounding rain caused clouds of steam to rise off the sidewalks.  I was making my way out of Philadelphia and heading for home anxiously thinking of all I had to do in anticipation of our move.  There was lots of packing to do and uncertainty in general since the home we were building was behind in construction.  I was disheartened because I had no idea how long my family would be living in temporary housing.

I stopped at a red light – third in line.  That’s when I spotted a pathetic looking, little cocker spaniel trying to push her way into a bank door.  People were moving in and out shushing her away, and she was soaking wet.  Her sad brown eyes darted back and forth, scared and sadly searching for someone…anyone.  She was obviously abandoned, and my heart broke.  Without thinking, I pulled over to the side of the road.  It wasn’t a safe neighborhood, so I wasn’t about to get out of the car.  I reached for a towel on the floor of the car and quickly threw it on the seat.  I opened the passenger door and called to her.  If she gets in, I’ll…well, I don’t know what I’ll do, but if she doesn’t, she’s out of luck.  Without hesitation, the dog ran to me and jumped right in the car, sat down and looked out the front window as if to say “where are we going?”  I fed her a pretzel, which she immediately hid in the towel.  It became her way with food – always hiding a little of it to save for later.  It must have been something she learned living on the streets.

I thought about the other two dogs I had at home, a golden retriever and a black lab.  I don’t need another dog, I thought.  I would be living with my brother in the interim until the house was completed – how would he react to one more dog?

Driving straight to my veterinarian, I was lucky they took her in.  “Can you please keep her over night, give her all her shots and please, could someone bathe her?” I asked.  She was a grimy brownish-gray color.  A while later the veterinarian called to report she was very sick with a fever and full of worms and fleas.  She weighed only 16 lbs. – half of what she should have weighed. Heaven only knows how long she had survived out on the streets of Philadelphia by herself.  I authorized all treatment.

After I broke the news to my family, I fretted over how Skylar would get along with my other dogs.  Throwing caution to the wind, I picked her up the next day.  She was hanging out in the office with the receptionist who was feeding her treats.  I looked but almost didn’t recognize her, astounded that once bathed she was pure white with a few brown patches around her eye and on her ears.  She was adorably cute and spunky.  Everyone had fallen in love with her at the veterinarian’s office.  The vet tech wanted to take her home to her grandmother.  But my gut said no; I had found her for a reason, and she was meant to be with me.

The first few days weren’t easy.  My other two dogs were very friendly, but Skylar was scared, constantly growling and snapping at them.  It must have been frightening for her with two towering giants sticking their curious noses in her face.  She wouldn’t sleep in the crate, scratching and pawing frantically until we let her out.  She chased my neighbor’s cats relentlessly and was merciless with the squirrels in our yard.  She barked at every moving object.  She was extremely territorial with her food, which was probably a survival mechanism. Feeding time became a snarling fight until I began feeding her in another room. Eventually she settled in. She loved going for car rides and was a relentless ball catcher and squeaky toy player. 

 A month later we all moved in with my brother, who accepted her unconditionally. She adjusted tremendously as we all did.   In time we moved to a new home, and it was as if she had been with us all of our lives.  And you know what?  She became one of the best dogs I’ve ever had!

Skylar stood faithfully by my side and comforted me during many difficult situations including the death of my parents, divorce, my kids leaving the nest and the sad passings of my other beloved dogs.  She became my role model for adaptation and flexibility and demonstrated endurance through hard times.

Skylar suffered through many health problems including chronic ear infections, tick disease, a torn ACL, eye ulcers and two cancerous tumor removals.  Yet, through it all she remained as sweet and as adventurous as the day I picked her up.  She mellowed with age and slept a lot toward the end. Listening to her gentle snoring used to warm my heart, and I thanked God for this little ball of fur He blessed me with so long ago. 

She developed cancer in the end and was a trooper, as always, through what was probably painful for her at times.  The night I took her for her last car ride to the veterinarian’s office, my heart ached as I glanced over to see her sitting and looking out the window just as she had on that first car ride home.  Our veterinarian told me that Skylar had been hanging in there for me because of all I had been going through personally, and now it was time to let her go in peace.  So I painfully said goodbye to my faithful little companion of almost ten years.

I’ll never know what made me stop my car and open the door on that miserably hot and rainy summer’s day, but when I did, I was blessed with an angel disguised as a spunky little street dog who will always own a piece of my heart.

The Swan Whisperer

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The swan eventually found a mate - and added two babies to her brood.

As I made my way out of the house to the deck overlooking the lagoon, my mind was filled with worry invoked by my recent divorce. I was searching my heart for peace when I spied a beautiful swan floating effortlessly up the waterway toward me. I was awestruck at the friendliness and fearlessness of this curious creature. I quickly went into the house for a slice of bread to feed her, and then threw tiny pieces out to her. She reached for the morsels with her elegant, long neck and scooped the bread up with her rounded beak, savoring each piece. She came up really close and gazed at me, head tilted. She was only an arm’s length away, and I silently gazed upon her inquisitively since I’d never seen one so closely. I’ve had a fascination about swans for quite some time. Their beautiful white bodies, gorgeous necks and almost regal way of gliding across the water with their peaceful demeanor intrigues me.

Although they mate for life and are always together, this swan was alone. I wondered where her mate was because I had seen them together, and it made me wonder if she had lost him as well. I pondered about whether I would spend the rest of my days alone.

The swan eventually paddled off, head held high, belly full. As I watched her make her way down the inlet, I couldn’t help but think how serene and content she looked. I yearned for that tranquility. With a mate or without, she seemed to be composed and satisfied, and I felt at one with her. I knew I would be all right.

The Struggle To Forgive

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There are three sides to every story:  your side, their side and what actually happened.  It’s all in the perception of the people involved.  I began writing on the subject of forgiveness by relating a blow by blow litany on how I felt I was mistreated by someone.  The more I wrote, the more I scratched at the scab of healing.  I had to stop because this is not supposed to be about “how I was offended.”  No one really cares to know about sordid details anyway.  This is about trying to get through the darkness to the light at the end of the tunnel of forgiveness.

When I was wronged I began a journal, writing down my daily conflicts with the person involved, how the actions were affecting me and how I could resolve the issues.  Forgiveness was something I would not consider.  But then I began to question whether God keeps an account of my trespasses.  I hope not.  So I stopped writing about the trials because I sure didn’t want God getting out His journal about me at the end of my life.  About that same time a wise friend in retrospect conveyed to me that if Jesus hadn’t forgiven, He would have eaten the Last Supper alone.  I knew at that point that my struggle to forgive had begun.

I don’t think forgiveness has to be a larger than life moment where you actually say to the person who offended you, “I forgive you,” while thunder claps, music swells and confetti falls.  To me, it’s not about regaining a warm and fuzzy relationship with the person.  I have come to the conclusion that it’s more of a quiet, personal letting go of the anger.  It is something you do, not so much for the other person, as for yourself.  It’s the ability to move on before everything that’s good and kind about you deteriorates from the poison of hate.  You come to terms with yourself, wherein you decide that another person’s hurtful actions are not going to change who you are or what you stand for.  You decide that you are not going to be manipulated into a backlash by their bad behavior.

Forgiveness is a process you have to develop and practice each and every day.  It is hard work, and you may go back and forth several times before you come to grips with the matter.  But when you do, a sense of peace will settle in, and your actions will emulate that tranquility.

It’s easy to become hardened and bitter when someone does something hurtful to you. I won’t downplay the pain, trauma and suffering you experience when you feel you were betrayed.  I just ask you to take another look for your own sake.  Forgiveness can be a positive resolution wherein you choose to leave the past behind in order to move forward into an amazing future.