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patience

Why not me?

February 11, 2020 by Poornima Manco

Into each life, some rain must fall. So said Longfellow in his poem, ‘The Rainy Day’. Adversity does not discriminate, it does not pick and choose its recipients. So, when tough days come your way, as they inevitably will, is there any point in asking “why me”?

It is so easy to get lulled into a false sense of security when everything is going well. But life, well, life is never ever straight forward. Sometimes it doesn’t chuck just a bit of trouble your way, it chucks a bucket load and then some.

2019 was annus horribilis for us. It started out fine and then as the year progressed, my younger daughter’s health spiralled down once again. From pain in the back that was initially dismissed as a Vitamin D deficiency, then attributed to a muscle strain, I saw my active, mostly healthy and happy child become bed-ridden and dependant on crutches, while we ran from pillar to post for a proper diagnosis. This was not her first brush with ill health. She had suffered previously from other issues, nothing life-threatening thankfully, but enough to have affected her self esteem and joie de vivre.

The end of the year saw us turn a corner very cautiously, with hope in our hearts and a little prayer on our lips. Improvement was slow and steady with a few minor setbacks thrown in, but enough for us to see a little light at the end of this long, dark tunnel that we’d been trapped in for quite some time.

Then something else happened. It was a minor allergic reaction to something, but it brought all her previous fears rushing back. For nearly five years, it had been one thing or another, and my poor child was fed up, frustrated and at the end of her tether. She broke down in my arms, sobbing, asking – “Why me?”

I pacified her as best as I could, then calmly, almost clinically, asked her, “Why not you?”

It’s so easy for each of us to feel that we are hard done by, that no one else has the troubles that we do, that our suffering is monumental, that everyone else is living the dream while our lives are a nightmare. But look around, really look around. No one’s life is perfect. That social media perfection is the gloss that hides the daily grind and grime from each other.

Years ago, my mother had taught me a valuable lesson. She’d said, if you have to compare yourself to anyone, then do it with someone far worse off than you, because at that moment you will realise how blessed you really are.

I said the same to my daughter. I spoke about X, a young boy we knew well, who is now a young man, debilitated for the last 11 years, laid low by an unknown virus, unable to walk without aid, eat unassisted and completely unable to vocalise his thoughts or his emotions to his devastated parents. That, I said to her, is a tragedy. Yet, they keep putting one foot in front of the other and carrying on loving and taking care of their precious son.

I didn’t say this to diminish or ignore her suffering in any way, but to demonstrate that the Universe hands out its cards randomly and that what we are dealt with is our lot. We can choose to accept the challenge or be buried under the weight of it.

When life throws you that curveball, instead of asking “why me” which immediately casts you in the role of a victim, ask “why not me?” because that shows that you understand that you are not exempt from life’s woes, but more than up to the challenge of facing them head-on. You are NOT a victim. What you ARE is a survivor.

I’ll close with Longfellow’s poem as a little reminder to us all that rainy days will come, but if we are patient and resilient, the sunshine will follow soon enough.

The Rainy Day

The day is cold, and dark, and dreary;

It rains, and the wind is never weary;

The vine still clings to the mouldering wall,

But at every gust the dead leaves fall,

And the day is dark and dreary.

My life is cold, and dark, and dreary;

It rains, and the wind is never weary;

My thoughts still cling to the mouldering Past,

But the hopes of youth fall thick in the blast,

And the days are dark and dreary.

Be still, sad heart! and cease repining;

Behind the clouds is the sun still shining;

Thy fate is the common fate of all,

Into each life some rain must fall,

Some days must be dark and dreary.

– H.W. Longfellow

Filed Under: 2020, acceptance, behaviour, Blog, child, life, nurture, patience, rainy days, resilience

Pay it forward

September 16, 2019 by Poornima Manco

In today’s world so many of us are too busy being busy, to actually stop and consider how many times we have been at the receiving end of someone’s goodwill and benevolence.

Well, I, for one, would like to send out a BIG thank you to three people who I will not name, but who have shown me patience, empathy and most importantly, kindness.

A few weeks ago I found myself in a technological nightmare of horrendous proportions. It was something I could not have envisioned and had no way of forestalling. Totally unprepared, I threw myself at the mercy of what I later found out to be computer bots. Receiving standard format answer after standard format answer, I was at my wits’ end, totally frazzled, close to tears, when I approached a friend for help. She, in turn, reached out to a family member who had never met or spoken to me. But, at her behest, he started working upon my problem. Not only did he sort it out, he ensured that everything was up and running my end and that I was completely satisfied with the result.

He didn’t need to do any of it. He didn’t know me, nor did he owe me anything. Yet, he went out of his way to solve my issue. In return, all I could give him was a ‘thank you’. He didn’t want anything more. Kindness.

Meanwhile, my daughter has been suffering from crippling back pain. We have been trying to ascertain the cause for the last seven months, as the pain comes and goes. But while it’s there, it is completely debilitating. She has been given Vitamin D supplements and tonnes of painkillers, really strong ones too, but nobody has been able to get to the bottom of the issue. She has taken so much time off from school that it is becoming a concern. It is her GCSE year, after all.

We have been running from pillar to post, trying to get her an appointment with a rheumatologist or an orthopeadic consultant. With her laid up once again, and us desperate and looking for answers, we had one of our GP’s contact us and reassure us that we would get the appointment we required. Not only was she as good as her word, she wanted to be kept in the loop as she could understand our worry, having a daughter the same age as ours. Empathy.

Alongside, I’ve just started working with an editor on my latest book. Our contract was up until the 10th of September. All the monies have been paid, the work mostly done from her end. It is I who is lagging behind. Caught up in work, travel, family commitments, illnesses, I have not been able to keep my end of the bargain. Yet, she has been incredibly sweet and agreed to extend the deadline several times over. Patience.

All of these are such underrated virtues, but my goodness, what would the world be without them? I am so incredibly fortunate to be the recipient of all of this understanding and graciousness, and feel very humbled by it. There is little I can do for all of these people I’ve mentioned, except say thank you. But what I can do, in my own small way, is to pay it forward. To be kind, patient and empathetic towards another fellow human, maybe someone I don’t know too well, but someone who is in need, as I have been. To do something: reach out, provide a helping hand, unselfishly and without expecting anything in return.

Pay it forward. Isn’t that what humanity is about?

Filed Under: 2019, benevolence, Blog, empathy, goodwill, humanity, kindness, patience, pay it forward

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