Finding the Gifts
by Marie T. Russell
I am approaching my 50th birthday. Though part of me cannot quite
grasp that concept (what! me, fifty? impossible!), the other part is looking
forward to that day as a rite of passage, as a milestone in my life. Just as 13
years of age marks adolescence, 21 marks adulthood (at least officially), 50
seems to me to herald a reaching of maturity -- a certain "je ne sais quoi" of
"I've done it!" "I've made it through my 20s, 30s and 40s and have now attained
the crowning glory of 50! Well, I may not be sure about the "crowning glory",
but 50 is an important milestone in life.
I find myself looking at my life as BF (before 50) and AF (after 50), and
questioning my goals, my priorities, and what I really want to be doing with my
life (when I grow up). I find myself redefining how I want to be living my life,
what is important to me, what I "really" want to be doing with my time.
Approaching fifty is helping me see my life through a different perspective --
rather as a "new start", or somewhat as people sometimes feel at the beginning
of a new year -- a chance to start fresh.
Happy Birthday, Sweet Fifty
We usually think of gifts as being given and received on special occasions --
birthdays, weddings, anniversaries, baby-showers, Christmas, etc. Yet, each day,
life brings us amazing gifts, as well as small, simple, yet awesome ones. I was
reminded of this the other day.
I was online buying a gift for my brother's birthday. As I found something
for him, I also found something I would like. So to "justify" spending the money
on myself (after all I was "supposed to" be buying a gift for him, not myself),
I decided it would be a gift for my 50th birthday. So on the message line, when
I placed my order, I wrote in: Happy 50th Birthday, Marie.
The package arrived exactly one month, to the day, before my birthday. Part
of me thought I "should" wait till my birthday to open it, and of course the
other part wanted to open it now. Well, being very good at finding reasons to do
the things I want to do, I decided that since 50th birthdays are milestones in
life, that they needed to be celebrated not just on one day, but for a longer
time. And, since the gift arrived exactly one month to the day before my
birthday, I then decided to make that the first day of a 30 day celebration of
my fiftieth birthday. I decided that I would receive or give myself a gift each
day of the one month prior to my birthday.
So, yes I opened the gift right away and enjoyed it (some CDs of Golden
Oldies). And then my quest started -- I needed to receive a gift each day for the
following month. Well, the Universe seemed to have been right in with me on this
one, because the next morning when I got to my desk at the office, there were
three "chocolate kisses" sitting by my keyboard. Lisa, who works with us, had
put them there for me (she knows of my appreciation of chocolate). So that took
care of the gift for that day (hey, gifts don't have to be big -- they simply have
to be gifts!) The next day, my brother and his wife, who were visiting from
Canada, brought me back some chocolate from a chocolate manufacturer they had
visited in Lilitz, PA (oh, yum, more chocolate!) Then the day after that, they
brought me a gift from a store they had visited -- a beautiful small hand-carved
angel.
On the days that no one brings me a gift, or that I don't give myself a gift,
I find myself looking around to see what gift the Universe has brought me that
day. This has opened my eyes (once again) to the gifts that are handed to us
each day, and that we sometimes take for granted. Of course there's the "amazing
ones" like the sun rising each day, the gift of life each morning when we awake,
and the miracle of our body and mind functioning as a "well-oiled machine". But
there's also the small gifts: finding a parking spot right in front of the
building where you're going on a busy day, finding the perfect card for that
special friend, having someone give you a compliment, receiving a letter, email,
or phone call from a friend you haven't heard from in ages, taking the time to
sit in the sun and smell the roses! All of these are gifts that are there "for
the appreciating" each and every day.
I find that as each day passes as I approach my fiftieth birthday, I discover
more and more gifts in my life. The ability to write this article and reach you,
"my reader", is a great gift. The ability to make a difference is a great gift
(one which we all have). The blessing of computers and internet connectivity is
also a great gift. The technology that allows me to record my favorite TV shows
(like The Daily Show on Comedy Central) and watch them whenever I choose is a
great gift. The gifts are there, abounding around us! We need to start noticing
them!
The wonderful thing about being grateful for the gifts in life is that you
feel so good when you're in a state of appreciation and gratitude. It's hard to
be grumpy and depressed when you're noticing the wonderful things that are
showing up in your life. And of course, the greatest blessing in that scenario
is since "like attracts like", the more you express and feel gratitude and joy
for those blessings and gifts, the more they keep coming! It's a wonderful
circle! Gratitude begets gratitude, joy begets joy, and blessings beget
blessings.
So, to remember (and paraphrase) one of my favorite songs: "We are the
children. Let's start living, let's start giving."-- and let's start being
grateful and appreciative for the wonderful things in our life, and set about to
create more of them, for ourselves, for our loved ones, and for the planet and
future generations as well.
RECOMMENDED BOOK:
On Women Turning Fifty: Celebrating Mid-Life Discoveries
by Cathleen Rountree.
Cathleen Rountree
offers intimate portraits of 18 women who show us that mid-life can be the prime
of life for women today.
Interviews with women as diverse as single-parent school teachers and
celebrities Gloria Steinem, Ellen Burstyn, and Isabel Allende,
Info/Order this book.
About The Author
Marie
T. Russell is the founder of InnerSelf Magazine (founded 1985). She also
produced and hosted a weekly South Florida radio broadcast, Inner Power, from
1992-1995 which focused on themes such as self-esteem, personal growth, and
well-being. Her articles focus on transformation and reconnecting with our own
inner source of joy and creativity.
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