Thanksgiving 2012 has recently been experienced and Christmas and New Year holidays are on their way. There is always a heightened level of excitement in the air during our major holiday season. And yet I know that some of you, my young friends are feeling very differently about the holidays.
Several years ago, I had one experience with a family at Thanksgiving time. It began with a discussion of what they would be doing on Thanksgiving Day. I was informed that Thanksgiving Day is not a happy day for this family anymore. This was the day, several years before, that the husband and father informed the mother and teenage boy and girl that he was leaving them for good! I was told, this dad had somehow thought that Thanksgiving dinner was the perfect time for his revelation of his new course of life and for his parting words! The mother and daughter insisted that this had spoiled Thanksgiving forever for the son, her, and the daughter.
Now if you think of this situation, you can certainly understand why Thanksgiving was not the most popular holiday around the house. It brought up issues that were disgusting and hurtful. Think how betrayed they all felt on that fateful day. Here was the husband and father in that home telling the rest of the family, at what should have been a happy occasion and family-unifying event, that he was now breaking his wedding vows to the mother, and divorcing from her, thus causing her and his children to be put through a family split resulting in financial and emotional distress. Instead of this being a happy family event, it had now become a time marker for the falling apart of their worlds as they knew them. Needless to say, that dad was not popular with the kids for awhile.
In fact, the son, who was now in the U.S. Navy and stationed on the Eastern Seaboard, was still not celebrating Thanksgiving and would have nothing to do with his dad. The daughter, who now had a daughter of her own, lived with the mother, and was spending Sunday evenings with her dad, was still feeling anger at her dad for that, and, like her mother, would have nothing to do with Thanksgiving Day.
Along I came, shocked at the development of these circumstances, and put in my two cents worth. I told the mother and daughter that I would not let someone else ruin my Thanksgiving Day. Why should they let someone else control whether they have a fun Thanksgiving? I told them I thought they should go ahead and enjoy.
And they did after that, so far as I know.
Just think how miserable we could all be if we let someone else control our lives in that manner. My friends, don't let someone else's actions take control over your emotions and your lives. Be determined to live life to the fullest and happiest. It may be harder after being abandoned or traumatized, but when we let other's actions make us feel a certain way, we are giving control of our lives to them. Yes, we are hurt. We are hurt very badly, and that is probably understating all that has happened. Yet, we can rebuild our lives in a different way and still live them. We can free ourselves from others' control by putting those issues behind us and going on to be the best we can be.