A good friend,
like a daughter, asked me recently why I chose the 100 Days of Happy project to
help with my grieving. I had to dig
deeply to answer her. I have and I
wanted to share that with you all and with her.
I have always
been an optimist—sometimes called a Pollyana.
This eternal positive attitude occasionally got on people’s nerves and I
could see why, but I wasn’t able to
change it. It was ingrained in my DNA.
When I moved to
New York in April 2014, I was pretty broken.
The effects of losing Ted and Lateef were evident. Oh, I was making it. I looked pretty good on the outside but the
insides didn’t match at all. I knew how
I felt and I knew that I just had to feel better. I could not be content with this empty,
aching hole in my heart and constant churning in my stomach. When I tried to breathe deeply, as I’d taught
my students in yoga class, my breath caught in my chest. When I tried to eat, food stuck in my throat
and would not go down without major effort.
Nothing tasted good to me except ice cream, macaroni and cheese and
French fries. A recipe for disaster!
Grief counseling
helped, reading books on grief and grieving helped, reading the Bible for
inspiration helped, but I needed more.
So in early
April, my daughter, my muse, took one look at me from her broken place and
suggested that I might want to participate in this project called 100 Happy
Days started by the 100HappyDays Foundation.
The premise was to take a picture each day of something that made you
smile or feel happy.
You know how
someone suggests something to you and you know right away that “This is
it?” Well that’s what happened to me
with this suggestion from my muse.
Rashida is truly my inspiration and knows me better than probably any
family member except my sister. She
knows that I love projects and that once I get started on something, I really
burrow in. I trust her, so I started
researching.
I immediately
went to the 100HappyDays Foundation’s website for information. There I found that 73% of the people who
started this project would not finish it.
I, always up for a challenge, was intrigued. I just knew that if I started it, I would
finish it. Any of my friends and family
will tell you that the way to get me to do something would be to challenge
me. The challenge intrigued me but there
was something more than that. This
foundation’s aim was to foster happiness in the world and I liked the sound of that.
This was not an
exercise just to be doing something. I
knew that if I immersed myself into this task, it could be life changing for me
and, perhaps, for others who might need some inspiration.
The results were
amazing. I started looking outward
instead of inward. Where before each
morning’s light would bring a wash of sadness and a reliving of the horrible
one/two blow our family had just endured, the first thing I started thinking of
was what my picture for the day would be.
A small shift, but epic because it brought hope to my day. That’s not to say that sadness did not find
me again that day, because it usually did.
The difference was that I started my day well and that was
important. It was easier to go back to
happyduring the day if I started out that way.
Some days it was
easier to find “happy” than others, but I always found something. Some days I found more than one thing and had
to choose which picture made me happiest!
I looked at the city, my environment, with very different eyes. Instead of the noise, I looked for quiet
beauty sometimes found in the façade of a beautiful old building, sometimes a
garden in the middle of 2 blocks of concrete, sometimes a dog walker walking 10
dogs at once. Instead of a big, dirty
city, I looked for the beauty in a wall decorated with graffiti. Instead of aggressive, fast walking, fast
talking New Yorkers, I looked for some pictures of people beautifully or artistically
dressed. I saw love when I photographed
a man and his wife holding hands—she all bent over with some kind of disease—he
being her helpmate. A street closed so that
school children could play. A sign
looking for an owner of a wool hat left in a taxicab. The opportunities were many. If I wasn’t looking for “happy”, I might have
walked past all of these scenes with unseeing eyes. I might have missed my opportunity to really,
really see the beauty in small things. The
yogis have a saying, “Be here now” or “Be in the present”, that is exactly what
was happening to me. I was really being
a witness—being mindful of what was around me. If, by any chance, I did not find a picture
outside for the day (inclement weather, whatever) I would look for a quote on
the internet that resonated with me and share that. It had the same effect.
One happy day led
to another. One happy week led to
another. I was starting to feel better, walk taller. My breath was moving through my body
better. The good effects of this project
on my life started piling up. Like when
I lost weight on Weight Watchers. When I
lost a pound, I felt better and wanted to keep going and so I did.
Something else
was beginning to happen. My Facebook
friends were starting to give me feedback.
Some were getting inspiration from my postings, some really liked the
New York scenes, some just wanted to encourage me to continue. When I got close to 100 days, some asked
whether I would continue. I wasn’t sure
that I would but I thought hard about it.
On day 101, I walked into our beautiful Carl Schurz Park to walk along
the East River. As I walked down the
winding path, my eyes fell upon a woman sitting on the grass looking out
towards the river. Her arm was draped
around a big, beautiful Golden Retreiver.
The scene was so serene and I knew in an instant that that was my 101st
picture. I pulled my cell phone out of
my pocket and took a couple of pictures.
Later that day I posted the picture with the comment that I would
continue on to 365 happy days.
This morning I
posted happy day picture #301. I am
closing in on my goal and will probably fill that void with something else,
we’ll see what comes up. Something
always does.
This project has
helped me so much. Something seemingly
so small made such a large difference to me and, hopefully, to others. To be able to start my day with hope instead
of dread. To be able to look at the
world with clear eyes, instead of eyes clouded by pain. To be able to find joy in small things
instead of soothing my emotional pain with food or things. All of these things came slowly, but they did
come and the effect of this project on me has been massive.
So, why did I choose
happiness, Asali? Because sadness was
not enough. Not nearly enough.