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Dr. Dan's thoughts on healing and personal stories

Last post 07-06-2010, 6:46 PM by ivonne jolain. 28 replies.
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  •  02-23-2010, 12:42 PM 69986

    Dr. Dan's thoughts on healing and personal stories

    I just did a radio show on neuroplasticity, how the brain, with practice, can actually heal significant deficits that we used to think were incurable. The mantra of the fees nor a plastic experts is: "neurons that fire together wire together". So that when we do something enough it becomes habit -- no matter what we do.
    We know how that works with dozens of our little quirks. But it works exactly the same way with our worldview. The more we express it, the more we believe it, the more it becomes our truth. "I am a quadriplegic and I will never experience joy again." That's what I felt for the first few years. Fortunately that belief system was not locked in so that when I did experience joy, I slowly changed my worldview.
    Others are not so fortunate. They have one way of looking at their lives and that becomes their truth.
    A friend of mine grew up with a mother who was mentally ill, negligent and impulsive. She grew up, understandably feeling frightened and unable to trust. Later that year turned to anger and bitterness. She believes that people are not trust worthy, then bad things will happen right around the corner and that disappointment is a fact of her life. She comes by this belief honestly. But neurons that fire together... Although she has been divorced for 10 years, she has two beautiful grown children who adore her, a job that nurtures her, and a grandchild on the way. And yet her belief system hasn't changed at all.
    Rachel Naomi Remen tells a story about three stone cutters in biblical times. Their job was to cut stones so that a temple could be built. The first stonecutter, when asked about his job, said bitterly: "my job? My job is to cut round stones into the square ones. That's all I do all day every day week in and week out." As the second cutter said: "I sit here and cut rocks so that my family can have food and shelter." And the third one: "I'm cutting rocks to build a temple where people will come to worship and find solace for hundreds of years to come."

    Same rocks, same wheelchair. Different stories.

    Any habit can be broken. Even a habit of worldview. First, we have to be willing to open our minds and hearts to other ways of looking at our lives.
    And then we have to practice new behaviors. Practice kindness for a couple of hours a day. Four or five times a day, force yourself to smile whether you feel like it or not. Act as though you are happy even if you don't feel like it. Because neurons that fire together...

    anybody care to try?

    . For more details: "Mindsight: The New Science of Personal Transformation." By Daniel Siegel MD. Or: "The Brain That Changes Itself" by Norman Dodge M.D.
    Dan Gottlieb Ph.D.
    www.DrDanGottlieb.com
    "wisdom of Sam: observations on life from an uncommon child"
    trailer:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_V4QrekU1Wk
  •  02-23-2010, 5:42 PM 69994 in reply to 69986

    Re: Dr. Dan's thoughts on healing and personal stories

    I think Daniel Siegel's work is very interesting and supports the stance that positivity and a feeling of belonging to something larger than ourselves is a matter of choice of perspective, like you said, "same rocks, same wheelchair, different stories" ... change your story, change your life.

    "Whether you think you can or think you can't - you are right." - Henry Ford

    "A pessimist sees the difficulty in every opportunity; an optimist sees the opportunity in every difficulty." - Winston Churchill
  •  02-24-2010, 8:38 PM 70019 in reply to 69994

    Re: Dr. Dan's thoughts on healing and personal stories

    Well obviously I’m not a student of psychology, but I call this the fake it until you make it approach. 

     

    4 years ago today I adopted a 7 year old golden retriever from our local golden rescue group.  This dog spent his first 7 years in a garage.  He wasn’t allowed in his owner’s house but could enter and exit the garage to the backyard through a dog door.  The rescue group told me about the dog’s background, but I thought no big deal.  Goldens are the most friendly, lovable dogs there are.    

     

    Unfortunately this dog had developed some rather unusual behaviors.  I, of course, thought the dog would be ecstatic to be in the house.  Wrong!  He was scared of everything, the dishwasher, the phone ringing, the vacuum cleaner, the TV.  This lovable golden was even afraid of people, especially men.  When I first brought the dog home and let him in, he dove into the sofa and stayed there for the next 12 hours.  It was such an ordeal to get him to go outside because you had to open the door so wide and step away from it until he mustered the courage to run out.  But that was the easy part.  Getting him to come back inside was harder.  I actually had to go out to the yard, put a leash on him and walk him (or sometimes drag him) back into the house.  I sadly wondered how many times this dog had been slammed in a door or simply just turned away.  The dog hid from every visitor that came over.  People only saw a blur of dog hair going by as he ran upstairs to flee these strangers.

     

    But we loved the dog anyway.  We nurtured him, adored him, and eased him into our lifestyle.  It took a while but eventually he started to change.  Today he is a typical, ultra lazy, love-everyone-to-death golden.  He’s no longer afraid.  When people come over now they always say “Hey, where’s that other dog you had?”  I reply “This is that other dog.”  But really he is a totally new dog.

     

    So why is he so different now?  New environment, nurture, patience, consistency, fire and wire….I don’t know.  What I do know is that sometimes it’s not so easy to pretend yourself or think yourself happy.  Maybe sometimes we just need someone to walk us in and out the door until we can do it on our own.  Hey, it worked for my dog.


    Trish

    "Life isn't about waiting for the storm to pass...it's learning to dance in the rain."
  •  03-10-2010, 11:40 AM 70225 in reply to 70019

    Re: Dr. Dan's thoughts on healing and personal stories

    Trish,
    your story about the dog is a beautiful one. And well told. But you always have a knack for telling your stories in a compelling way.

    It is your conclusion that I would like to discuss with you. Like the dog, we are social animals and we do need people walk us in and out. More specifically, we need people who take a genuine interest in us, care about us. And I agree with what you have been implying in many of your e-mails -- without that, there is no growth, no learning, no tools to help rewire our brains. We need the care of others.

    But because of those neurons that fire together, not only is our perspective skewed, even our vision. Because of those neurons, not only do we tend to see and experience things in the same way, we don't notice many things in our everyday experience. For example, you might have people in your life that have taken a genuine interest in you and care about you. But because of those neurons you may not have noticed. And because of those neurons, you might be having difficulty opening to that care. And all of this is a perfect segue to what I have been suggesting we all need to do. I have been suggesting we all need to do nothing for a designated block of time every day.

    Meditation is not about quieting our minds, that's impossible. And meditation is not about changing our moods or our thoughts, that's alchemy! Meditation is simply noticing our lives. So we sit, preferably in the morning, and try to focus all of our attention on our breath. Try to notice whether you feel it more in your nostrils, just or belly. Then try to notice the moment you let go. And of course your mind will race away and take your attention with it. This will happen many times. I have been practicing over 10 years daily and it still happens dozens of times to me.

    But here is the most interesting part -- every single time you notice your mind has wandered and you bring your attention back to the breath, many things begin to happen in your brain and in your mind. As soon as you notice, you are beginning to lay down new neural pathways in your brain. This is teaching your brain to let go of thoughts when they happen and come back and notice the moment you are in. And in this particular moment you are breathing, you might notice the temperature in the room or the way your hands feel when they rest on your knees.

    And by the way, during this process you will also feel emotions that go with thoughts and vice versa. And your mind/ego is going to want you to chase all of those thoughts and emotions around the block. At the moment you notice that you are breathing, you are again training your brain to quiet the ego.

    I have found after all these years of meditating that I am no less neurotic and my mind interferes almost as much as it always did with my meditation. But I have also learned that thoughts are just thoughts and emotions are just that. I still suffer, and some items a great deal. And whenever I suffer it lasts longer than I want it to. But there is also this core sense deep inside me that the suffering is not who I am and it's not a statement of anything, it's just what I am feeling right then. There is a part of me that feels solid underneath all of my thoughts and emotions that stays the same no matter what. Well, usually!

    And all I do is sit there for a half-hour a day and don't do anything.
    Dan Gottlieb Ph.D.
    www.DrDanGottlieb.com
    "wisdom of Sam: observations on life from an uncommon child"
    trailer:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_V4QrekU1Wk
  •  03-13-2010, 1:09 PM 70264 in reply to 70225

    Re: Dr. Dan's thoughts on healing and personal stories

    Dan,

    Maybe we are both essentially agreeing on this.  First recognizing the need for rewiring, second figuring out how to get rewired, and finally actually allowing it to happen is not an easy or simple process.  It seems it might require both tools and people that care.

     

    And yes I agree with you that our perception and vision also gets skewed.  I’ll even go one step further and tell you that my hearing is now skewed.  A few months ago I was caring for my husband over a weekend.  We had no nursing help so it was just me for the entire weekend.  One of the days, I had spent nearly the entire morning taking care of his needs.  I fed him breakfast, brushed his teeth, shaved him, ROM, got him dressed, transferred and positioned him perfectly in his chair, washed and dried his hair and finally turned on his computer and set up his phone.  Then I managed to clean up his room, change his sheets, clean out his various supplies and start a load of his laundry.  It was nearly noon then, and I was still in my pajamas.  I sat down on the sofa just for a moment merely to gather enough energy to actually take a shower myself.  Just then he came wheeling into the family room.  He stopped and looked across the kitchen and said, “Hey is that a penny over there on the floor.”  Well that was not at all what I heard.  I heard “You don’t think you’re done yet, do you?  There’s a penny over there on the floor.  I want you to get up and pick it up right now.”   So I got up, walked into the kitchen, picked up the penny and carried it over to him.  I opened my hand and showed him the penny and said “yep Einstein, you’re right, that was a penny over there.”  Then I proceeded to throw the penny across the kitchen and it landed in essentially the same spot from where I had picked it up. 

     

    Well the story doesn’t end there.  The next 15 minutes consisted of a rant that went something like this:  “When you lost the ability to pick up a penny yourself, you lost the right to tell me when to pick up a penny.  I pick up any coin, scrap of paper, dust bunny, or morsel of food that falls on the floor.  I don’t need you to tell me when you want it done.  I’ll do it when I want to do it   Unless it’s blocking your pathway, keep your opinion to yourself.”  You get the idea here.  Writing it all down now makes me see how ridiculous ranting over a penny on the floor is, but that’s what I mean about my hearing being skewed.  I know I wasn’t really ranting about a penny.  I suppose the issue is that now I mostly expect anything that comes out of his mouth will probably be a request for me to do something.  Even things that are not, my mind can turn them into one.

     

    Maybe recognizing this has to be the first step to changing this view.  I guess now I just need a good electrician to help me get my wires uncrossed.  Maybe this meditation is part of the key to retrain by brain.  I’ll try.  But remember; never ask me to pick change up from the ground.  Apparently I have an issue with coins.   
    Trish

    "Life isn't about waiting for the storm to pass...it's learning to dance in the rain."
  •  03-16-2010, 12:32 PM 70316 in reply to 69994

    Re: Dr. Dan's thoughts on healing and personal stories

    very good article. my problem; i was an athlete and now am paralyzed, but am trying to let moltmann's theology of hope lead me. education keeps my mind active. i've been approaching philosophy and theology again
  •  03-16-2010, 12:40 PM 70317 in reply to 70264

    Re: Dr. Dan's thoughts on healing and personal stories

    So next time someone says to me "Penny for your thoughts", I will run like hell.
    I watch these kinds of interactions in my office every day when I work with couples. They're here each other they hear what they are expecting to hear. Hearing becomes impaired by intense emotions like anxiety, anger -- or exhaustion.
    At one level, you couldn't hear him because you were so very tired physically and emotionally. You needed a rest and compassion. For most of us, we are not aware when we need those things until it is too late. Our minds race so fast that we don't even know what we are experiencing.
    And add to that the expectations we place on ourselves. They are rarely reasonable or realistic, and for some reason, that inner voice never seems to say: "great job, why don't you rest for a while."
    Dan Gottlieb Ph.D.
    www.DrDanGottlieb.com
    "wisdom of Sam: observations on life from an uncommon child"
    trailer:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_V4QrekU1Wk
  •  03-17-2010, 5:52 AM 70326 in reply to 70316

    Re: Dr. Dan's thoughts on healing and personal stories

    Welcome abballard
    Would you mind sharing your level of injury? I too was an athlete and thought I had to give it all up. Took me 14 yrs but I finally figured out that I could still enjoy sports, participate and most importantly--take great please out of the sports, even using adaptive equipment. It opened up a whole new world to me.

    I too focused on my education and it got me where I wanted to be.  I think hope is so important-it moves us forward each day.

    Thank you,

    Every day I wake up is a good one.
    phf 59-08
  •  03-30-2010, 1:50 PM 70551 in reply to 70326

    Re: Dr. Dan's thoughts on healing and personal stories

    I recently worked with a woman who had been a paraplegic for five years. Her husband of 15 years left the marriage last year and she was devastated and angry. And now she feared she would be without love for the rest of her life. With her anger, she complained about her husband, lack of wheelchair access at her place of employment, frustration with her wheelchair, her insurance company, difficult and wheelchair access in the homes of her siblings.
    Anger is a judicial emotion -- it is a reaction to injustice. And everyone reading these words has experienced injustice, and most of us have experienced the anger that goes with it.

    And inevitably underneath the anger is great sadness and grief. And as she quietly cried, I asked her what she wanted. "I want a man who loves me, and I want to be out of this f**king wheelchair."

    All pain is where yesterday used to be. So we tell ourselves if we could have what we had yesterday, we will be happy again. It's funny, even people who were miserable before the trauma want what they had yesterday! We want what we had yesterday because we cannot conceive of finding security, serenity or even happiness in this life.

    Can you? What is it that you believe you need to bring you happiness?
    Dan Gottlieb Ph.D.
    www.DrDanGottlieb.com
    "wisdom of Sam: observations on life from an uncommon child"
    trailer:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_V4QrekU1Wk
  •  03-30-2010, 3:45 PM 70553 in reply to 70551

    Re: Dr. Dan's thoughts on healing and personal stories

    What do I need for happiness? Well, to borrow the title of a divorce support book by Powell, "Happiness is an Inside Job". I am reminded of this over and over again as I achieve recovery milestones that I thought would bring with it happiness, that happiness has nothing to do with the exterior and everything to do with our interior.

    I was at the police department yeaterday filing an identity theft report and had a conversation with a woman and her child, who had drawn a picture for one of the officers. As we both exited the building, the woman stopped me and asked me a question, first apologizing for asking because she could still walk and did not appear disabled in spite of suffering chronic pain for the past 16 years following a traumatic brain injury.

    Her question was one that I believe is linked firmly to happiness, was how do you arrive at acceptance? She shared that others keep telling her that she has to arrive at the point of acceptance that pain is just a permanent part of her life and she is still struggling with how to do that.

    Part of my response to her was that I have the same struggle and have not "arrived" either. I shared my relatively young practice of meditation and yoga and some other pain relief strategies that might be helpful. (I really am fortunate enough to not have issues with pain unless something is wrong.)

    She seemed both relieved to share a common experience and frustrated that I did not have a solution to the illusive "arriving at acceptance".

    To make a long story shorter, I believe that acceptance of one's circumstances as they are is integral to happiness. (Thank you Dan and Jon Kabat-Zinn among others) For me, it's still a work in progress.
    -----------------------
    "We must offer ourselves to God like a clean, smooth canvas and not worry ourselves about what God may choose to paint on it, feel only the stroke of his brush>" - Jean Pierre de Caussade
  •  04-06-2010, 12:52 PM 70636 in reply to 70553

    Re: Dr. Dan's thoughts on healing and personal stories

    Nothing personal, but that word "acceptance" always gave me the heebie-jeebies (I think that's the first time I've seen that word in print!).
    That's because it implies that acceptance is a place we arrive at after a long painful journey. And once we've arrived there, we won't leave. I recently told someone that I have this fantasy that at my funeral just as they are closing the lid on the casket, a small voice inside will say "oh, now I get it."
    Happiness might be an inside job, but it starts on the outside. I have a new buddy named Jake and he is 20 months old and he and I are becoming real close pals. Anyway, every now and then he stops doing what he's doing and points to the sky. Then about 30 seconds later I hear an airplane. It's not that his hearing is so much better than mine (maybe it is), but he is not as distracted by his thoughts and emotions as I am. He can hear the airplane, take delight in touching a fallen branch, he giggles when he sees me and now I giggle when I see him. Happiness is on the outside, we just have to be paying attention.
    Have I accepted my quadriplegia? I don't know, I guess so. But I'm not happy when I noticed my pants are wet or when I get hurt during a transfer or lots of other things. So maybe I have accepted my quadriplegia, maybe not.
    My baldness however is a whole other story!
    Dan Gottlieb Ph.D.
    www.DrDanGottlieb.com
    "wisdom of Sam: observations on life from an uncommon child"
    trailer:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_V4QrekU1Wk
  •  04-06-2010, 3:10 PM 70638 in reply to 70636

    Re: Dr. Dan's thoughts on healing and personal stories

    Nothing personal? LOL!!! I agree with you about the acceptance thing. I've decided that if I ever write a book, it might have the title "Acceptance Is A Ten Letter Word..." I still believe happiness comes from within but "acceptance" is an expectation of others (and sometimes ourselves) from the outside. The ability to feel happy while observing the pure, in the moment joy of a young child, is a gift we give ourselves when we quiet our noisy, distracted mind and life enough to notice and smile.

    I have spent so much time this past week mulling over this term. Not sure why. Guess a visit to techno-hell increased my frustration to the tipping point (sorry Malcolm Gladwell!!!).

    I'm resigned to the reality that I have to take care of my body in ways that I never imagined previously, but am not sure that I will ever "accept" the alterations. They suck lemons most of the time!

    I think people on the "outside" (apologies to the psychologist part of you, Dan, and the nurse part of me!) play the acceptance card because it somehow allows them to wiggle off the hook of not knowing exactly how to help by dangling an expectation from their professional or personal understanding and experience of a "healthy, normal" way to deal with a tough issue.

    I'm sorry, but no amount of reframing, reworking my "story", thought stopping, meditation, disassociation, or distraction will ever make doing my bowel & bladder care "normal & acceptable". I do it because it keeps me healthy, period. End of story.

    Acceptance is just a ten letter word...someone else's story to make them feel less helpless. I do appreciate the intention, however, striving for "acceptance" is not, for me a reasonable goal.

    In retrospect, I realize the number of times I have been the one on the other end of this equation doing the best I could to listen and pray for a place of peace for those suffering unimaginable pain. What a full circle experience.
  •  04-12-2010, 7:28 PM 70704 in reply to 70638

    Re: Dr. Dan's thoughts on healing and personal stories

    Here’s my recent story of acceptance or lack there of; certainly not as dramatic as quadriplegia or baldness, but still.  A while back I put this little tiny chip in my tooth trying to pull a needle out of a basketball.  Yes I know, stupid idea, but I was in a hurry and didn’t have time to find the pliers.  Finally I decided I couldn’t accept this flaw any longer.  I found this LVI trained cosmetic dentist and made an appointment.  Well it all sounded so easy.  2 perfect, beautiful porcelain veneers to cover the little chip on one tooth and the hairline fracture on the other.  I thought I asked all the right questions and heard all the right answers.  The first appointment was last week where he had to shave away a “little” of my teeth in order to prepare them for the veneers.  As the shaving began, I started to panic.  It seemed like a whole lot of shaving was going on.  I never saw what the final damage looked like, but my tongue could feel it.  I was seriously about to freak out.  I’m sitting there not believing that I just had 2 perfectly acceptable teeth shaved to what feels like something hideous.  My teeth were pretty decent (I had braces) until now.

     

    Very quickly however, the dentist made these temporary teeth.  After he was done he handed me the mirror.  OK I’m feeling a little better; they really didn’t look so bad.  As he was walking me out the door, I said “so what are these temporaries made of.”  He says PLASTIC.  Now panic starts to set in as I’m getting in my car.  I have 2 plastic front teeth like ones maybe I could have won from Chuck E Cheese.  I can not believe what I have just done to my teeth.  This could all go so wrong.  I’m nearly crying by the time I get home thinking about it all.  I should have just lived with the little chip.  I don’t know how the story is going to end because my 2 front teeth are still plastic. 

     

    Dan, it’s just like what you keep saying.  We hang on to what is comfortable and familiar no matter how bad it is.  If we make a change, maybe the outcome will be better, but the process of getting there is rather scary.  It all seems so simple on paper or when someone is coaching you to a better place.  But once the process starts, it is terrifying.  I don’t know how this is all going to turn out, but I know for sure it’s going to be a change.  At this stage, what has happened can’t be undone.  I guess that is sort of like quadriplegia and baldness now that I think about it.  There is no going back, only moving forward.     


    Trish

    "Life isn't about waiting for the storm to pass...it's learning to dance in the rain."
  •  04-13-2010, 12:52 PM 70726 in reply to 70704

    Re: Dr. Dan's thoughts on healing and personal stories

    I saw a young couple yesterday whose marriage was barely hanging on. They were about 30 years old and both were beautiful in their own way and just beginning their lives. The wife was beside herself with pain and fear while the husband had been shut down for two years.
    He said he almost nothing but he was okay with that. He knew he was hurting his wife but felt there was nothing he could do. He said "we all change from our youth, this is where I've come to. I am done evolving."

    Almost everyone reading this knows it's not true. The process never finishes, and like it or not, we evolve. We change. And if we clutch tightly onto yesterday, we change slowly and painfully. And if we rest and have some kind of faith, the process of change becomes more organic with less friction.

    Anytime I suffer its because this moment is not the one I want. I usually don't care or don't notice as my nurse changes my catheter, I am usually looking out the window enjoying the foliage or planning my day. But some days I am in a hurry. And on those days I resent the fact that it takes two hours to get from my bed to start my day. I could even get involved in a little bit of self-pity if I'm in the mood, but usually it's just frustration. And the only difference between those two experiences is that with the first one I am living the life I have. With the second, I am angry because I cannot live the life I want.

    And I trust I will experience both for the rest of my life.

    And now I have a secret concession for ratherbflyin that I have just recently acknowledged to myself let alone to anyone else.

    For the first decade or more, I hated my bowel routine. I found it humiliating and repulsive. So much did I hate it that I had anxiety about it pretty constantly. And of course we all know the fear of having a bowel accident. So this was my private little hell -- anticipating the bowel routine, living through the humiliation, and then worrying about an accident.

    And then I didn't think about it much, it was just my life. And then several months ago, I realized (cue embarrassing expression) that I kind of like that solitude while I read the paper. Nobody's bothering me and I have a cup of coffee.

    Acceptance? Weird? Denial? Desperate for solitude? Who knows? Life is strange and interesting.

    And ever evolving.

    I think I need a new laptop and I am scared to death!
    Dan Gottlieb Ph.D.
    www.DrDanGottlieb.com
    "wisdom of Sam: observations on life from an uncommon child"
    trailer:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_V4QrekU1Wk
  •  05-04-2010, 7:50 AM 71082 in reply to 70726

    Re: Dr. Dan's thoughts on healing and personal stories

    My late wife had MS along with many of my friends and one of my current patients. I've always thought to myself that I was more fortunate than they because from the moment of my accident I knew exactly what I had to live with and that biologically/neurologically, my future was pretty predictable. I tried to imagine living with the disease to hold you captive one day and may set you free the next. But maybe not. And then there is the progressive nature of this awful disease. When I've worked with people before who've had this disease, I have always admired their ability to carry on their lives best they could with what they had. And whenever I was with them in the past, I felt as though my life, my disability was different.

    Well, now I am in my early 60s and I am working with a woman who has MS and is so debilitated, she she is confined to bed and feels her life is slipping away. But this feels different. Her life might end before mine, but it might not. After 30 years in a wheelchair, my predictability is no longer predictable. After eight or nine hours in a wheelchair, my shoulders and neck are so fatigued, I am in pretty severe pain that is limiting my day. My stamina is down, my blood pressure as wild fluctuations and I have developed strange symptoms secondary to stress.
    And my instinct is to wonder whether this is normal aging or a deteriorating quadriplegic body. Silly me -- as though it matters.

    A friend of mine is in a similar situation. She is a couple of decades post injury and finds herself loosing function. Like the rest of us, she wonders how long she will be able to work and struggles with where she wants her limited energy to go.

    Just realized that anyone reading this is probably pretty depressed by now. Sorry about that, but keep reading.

    Several years ago, I was on a meditation retreat and the task at hand was the process of letting go. So that's what we meditated on for several days -- letting go of attachments. Meanwhile, while I am meditating on letting go, I have a song stuck in my head. It's Dion Warwick's song "but I keep holding on". So I'm working on letting go and that damn song is in my head. Having a mind is not all it's cracked up to be!

    So after the workshop ended, I thought about the rest of the words in that line and then everything makes sense. "I know I'll never love this Way again, so I keep holding on."

    And that's what we do, all of us. We keep holding on. And that's why loss is so painful because we keep holding on to what we have. And that's why having a debilitating disease or even the process of aging is so frightening -- we keep holding on. But sadly most of us are not even conscious of why we keep holding on. We hold on because we love this life. Even if it involves suffering, we love having a life. And if we could be more conscious, we would love the fact that we have people in our lives who we love and love us back.

    Personally, I have grown to love my ability to breathe without coughing. I love watching nature, including humans. And I love all of these aspects of my life so intensely because I believe tomorrow may be smaller than today and I might not ever have the chance to "love this Way again".
    Dan Gottlieb Ph.D.
    www.DrDanGottlieb.com
    "wisdom of Sam: observations on life from an uncommon child"
    trailer:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_V4QrekU1Wk
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