Ever Lost Someone Close - To Death
by tvsetonline on Sep.17, 2008, under comdo, flat, hmes
Ever Lost Someone Close - To Death
During my life, I have been one of the fortunate ones. I have only lost one person to death. Recently my mother passed away, and I can Fortuna homes empathize with those of you who have known the sting of death.
There is this tremendous sense of loss. Memories that can never be shared again. Experiences you will never be able to tell them about. Laughter that is gone. Love that is Goodyears Bar homes gone. Friendship that is gone. Nothing but this emptiness in your heart.
When a loved one passes away – whether too soon as a young child, or later in the prime, or old as a grandparent who lived to the ripe old age of 95 – the hole in your heart is the same. We miss what could have been and will never be La Palma homes again.
Why does death hurt the living so much? Why do we grieve for our loved ones who have gone Kit Carson homes to a better place?
Our grievi
ng Los Alamos homes is often selfishness. We feel cheated, left behind or alone. Why did they leave us? Why did they do this to us? I cannot explain or rationalize the death of a young child because of a drunk driver or murderer running rampant through the halls of some high school or public place. I cannot Shasta Lake homes understand why cancer takes the dear souls in our life, while drug pushers and financial scoundrels get off Scott-free. I can only tell you that there must be a reason. It may be too midcentury modern vacation rentals difficult for me to comprehend with my limited spiritual wisdom, or it may because I have not yet come to totally believe in God’s master plan for salvation.
Regardless, feel your pain. Express your grief. Do not hide behind a fake smile. ocean city maryland condo rentals summer Send your departed loved ones your love and forgiveness. And then, move on. Yes, without them. I believe my mother will always be with me because she has a special place in my heart and my mind where she carved her name forever on the patchwork of riverdale, ny apartments for rent my being. Our loved ones are not gone, just absent for a time. Keep the memory of them alive and active in your actions, decisions, beliefs and values.
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Tim Connor, CSP is an internationally renowned "arizona art share" sales, management and leadership Hesperia homes speaker, trainer and best selling author. Since 1981 he has given over 3500 presentations in 21 countries on a variety of sales, management, leadership and relationship topics. Albuquerque Used Cars He is the best selling author of over 60 books including; Soft Sell, That’s Life, Peace Of Mind, 91 Challenges Managers Face Today and Your First Year In Sales. He can be reached at tim@timconnor.com, 704-895-1230 or visit his website at www.timconnor.com. |
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Turning 40
Most of us, at one point or another, take a moment to evaluate our lives and the paths that we have chosen to take. We each do it at Mesa Used Cars different times and with different emphasis. Sometimes people do it around high school or college graduation time, when deciding what career to pursue, how we want to be regarded by society, friends, and family or how to transition ourselves from a student to a grown up.
Some people do the evaluative process when planning for a family. Sometimes it takes the illness or death of a family member, or some other tragic event to make us stop and see if we are taking our life in the right direction.
For many of us, however, hitting a certain age can cause one to stop and take pause. This happened to me last summer. I had just hit "arizona art share" the big 3-9 and I realized that in less than one year I would be 40 years old. Now, I have been saying and believing that today’s 40 is yesterday’s 30, but I was still a bit shocked at the prospect that I would soon be what I had always considered middle aged.
Part of the problem for me with aging is that I never “feel” my age. I have this preconceived notion about what a person should be feeling or doing at a given age. I am always surprised though that I never match up with what my notion is. I have also realized that no one ever wants to be their real age. If I ask my kids how old they are they always want to round up… my daughter doesn’t turn 9 for a few weeks, but today she is nine if you ask her. Teenagers try everything to look older, sometimes even getting fake IDs to get into clubs and bars. Then once we hit 21, that magic age of “real” adulthood, something happens and we start to feel like we should begin shaving off years to continue to be young. The older we get the more years we shave off.
So in turning 40, I started to think about what that meant. My husband has been busting my chops because I am getting “old”, (I turn 40 two weeks before he does, something he finds great delight in!). I remember that when my parents turned 40, I thought that it did seem old. Today, I don’t feel like I thought 40 would feel. I certainly don’t feel old; I certainly don’t feel like 20 either! So how am I supposed to feel? How am I supposed to act? Do I have to be more serious and mature? Am I suppose to start looking into botox, or getting plastic surgery? Should I start buying sensible shoes? Do I need to start stocking my medicine cabinet Ivanpah homes differently?
In making the decision about how forty feels, and who I was going to be as a forty year old, I had to first look at who I was and how I currently felt. I have been plagued by a gnawing sense of insecurity since childhood, something that I have tried to work on for years. I didn’t always like myself and found it hard to have confidence in myself or my work. Friends and family would often be frustrated when paying me a compliment because I never wanted to beli