Hi Mary,
The subject line of this post is a great statement of attitude. You are so full of sunshine sometimes.
I think I was already going through a transition to a new view of life before my little AN hit. Some of that was social and occupational, but aging played a pretty big part.
It started with eyesight and making the switch to progressive lens, which are basically like trifocals with no lines. That is something you need when presbyopia (aging eyes) gets added to your existing myopia (near sightedness) and astigmatism (non-spherical eye shape). It took several tries to get the prescription right. While doing that, it was discovered that I had elevated eye pressure, a warning sign for glaucoma. For the first time in my life, I started taking a medication every day, even if it is just one drop in each eye once a day. Meanwhile, the dentist decided it was time to remove my front teeth, which were barely hanging on from an accident 30 years ago, so I went through getting a bridge in front, including wearing a "flipper" in place of front teeth for two months. My doctor recommended I get a colonoscopy. I was getting older, and it was time to realize that.
Of course all of that quickly diminished in significance when I then got the AN diagnosis. But the course was already set, and the AN just cemented it in place. That new course has mainly been one of changing my focus from me, myself, and I, to other people - family, friends, and the community at large. I know Jan is big on making donations, and I have been doing more of that, and finding that the old adage is true - give, and you shall receive. Either time or money will work, or even both. I find that my spirit is always lifted when good things happen around me, and it is actually easy and painless to make some of those things happen, sometimes in the very simplest of ways. For instance, always let people cut in front of you when driving; they might have a good reason to hurry, it might cheer them up, and it will gladden your heart, reduce your stress, and make the world a little bit nicer.
In an earlier life, I once went through becoming certified as a high school teacher. One of my professors restated another old adage as: those who can't do, teach, and those who can't teach, teach teachers. The can't part is not necessarily skill level; it can also be due to age or medical conditions. It's a switch that many of us will probably need to make as we go along our new paths.
On another subject, I am also planning to buy a cane for my Dad for his 88th birthday in May, to celebrate his new hip. I like the copper and dark blue enamel look. How do I go about measuring the length?
Best wishes for a great new year in 2009.
Steve