Being grateful isn't just for Thanksgiving. We can start perfecting our skills right now.
I care for people who often feel overwhelmed at the end of their lives. They’re making advance care directives and checking practical items off a to-do list. There are emotional to-do items as well.Amid a chaotic time, many of us will still feel the need to pause for a life review and make five essential statements:• Thank you.• I love you.• I’m sorry.• I forgive you.• Goodbye. Only one is really an "end-of-life" statement: Goodbye. The rest can be said at any time.Let’s start with the first one: Thank you. Many people tell me they’re no good at expressing gratitude. They can’t find the right words.That’s OK. Like anything, the more we practice, the better we get at it. Every year, Thanksgiving gives us the opportunity to practice the art of saying thank you in meaningful ways.In the weeks leading up to Thanksgiving, my clients begin with a gratitude journal. They write down three things they are grateful for as they start or end each day. Sometimes my clients give thanks for just a few minutes at bedtime to help get their mind in a peaceful state for sleep.Then they put aside some time to write a thank you note. They mail, text or email it a few days later. This is especially helpful if we want to thank someone who won’t be at Thanksgiving dinner this year.As we approach the last Thursday of November, consider simple ways to incorporate gratitude at Thanksgiving. Talk about what you’re thankful for during grace. Or set up a small Thanksgiving tree. SEND LETTERS TO: letters@suntimes.com. To be considered for publication, letters must include your full name, your neighborhood or hometown and a phone number for verification purposes. Letters should be a maximum of approximately 375 words. Place a pile of paper leaves next to the tree, along with a variety of pens for loved ones to write what they’re grateful for. Then hang the leaves anywhere you like on the tree.Sometime during the meal, maybe before dessert is served, go around the table and read the leaves out loud. Or silently read the leaves at your leisure.The day will come when we must reckon with regrets, forgiveness and gratitude before letting go. Making some of these statements early on leads to a more peaceful death someday — and a more joyful life right now.That’s something we can all be grateful for.Catherine Durkin Robinson, end-of-life doula and educator, Lake View EastSeceding stories I read in the Sun-Times this week that my home county, Perry, voted to consider seceding from Illinois. Times have really changed since I grew up in Pinckneyville, which was once represented in Congress by liberal icon Paul Simon. Related 7 downstate counties vote to consider seceding from Illinois to form new state I seceded from Perry County when I became a professor in Knoxville and seceded from Tennessee after I retired and moved to Chicago. I seceded again when I moved to Atlanta.Well, "you can’t go home again," but you can always secede.Bob Barth, Atlanta, GeorgiaHas-been state Seven downstate counties are considering seceding from Illinois. Their new state, the 51st in the U.S., can be named "Illinwas."Sandra Minor, McHenrySomber New Year On Jan. 20, Americans will be living under a fascist regime. Don’t believe it? Donald Trump’s former chief of staff, John Kelly, a retired Marine Corps general, provides us with a succinct definition of fascism. Project 2025 and Agenda47 fill in the details.Four years from now — IF we have a free and fair election or any election, and IF the American people reject the regime — it will take a generation to restore our democratic institutions and clean up the mess. 1930s Germany redux.Eleanor Shunas, West Ridge
I care for people who often feel overwhelmed at the end of their lives. They’re making advance care directives and checking practical items off a to-do list. There are emotional to-do items as well.
Amid a chaotic time, many of us will still feel the need to pause for a life review and make five essential statements:
• Thank you.
• I love you.
• I’m sorry.
• I forgive you.
• Goodbye.
Only one is really an "end-of-life" statement: Goodbye. The rest can be said at any time.
Let’s start with the first one: Thank you. Many people tell me they’re no good at expressing gratitude. They can’t find the right words.
That’s OK. Like anything, the more we practice, the better we get at it. Every year, Thanksgiving gives us the opportunity to practice the art of saying thank you in meaningful ways.
In the weeks leading up to Thanksgiving, my clients begin with a gratitude journal. They write down three things they are grateful for as they start or end each day. Sometimes my clients give thanks for just a few minutes at bedtime to help get their mind in a peaceful state for sleep.
Then they put aside some time to write a thank you note. They mail, text or email it a few days later. This is especially helpful if we want to thank someone who won’t be at Thanksgiving dinner this year.
As we approach the last Thursday of November, consider simple ways to incorporate gratitude at Thanksgiving. Talk about what you’re thankful for during grace. Or set up a small Thanksgiving tree.
SEND LETTERS TO: letters@suntimes.com. To be considered for publication, letters must include your full name, your neighborhood or hometown and a phone number for verification purposes. Letters should be a maximum of approximately 375 words.
Place a pile of paper leaves next to the tree, along with a variety of pens for loved ones to write what they’re grateful for. Then hang the leaves anywhere you like on the tree.
Sometime during the meal, maybe before dessert is served, go around the table and read the leaves out loud. Or silently read the leaves at your leisure.
The day will come when we must reckon with regrets, forgiveness and gratitude before letting go. Making some of these statements early on leads to a more peaceful death someday — and a more joyful life right now.
That’s something we can all be grateful for.
Catherine Durkin Robinson, end-of-life doula and educator, Lake View East
Seceding stories
I read in the Sun-Times this week that my home county, Perry, voted to consider seceding from Illinois. Times have really changed since I grew up in Pinckneyville, which was once represented in Congress by liberal icon Paul Simon.
I seceded from Perry County when I became a professor in Knoxville and seceded from Tennessee after I retired and moved to Chicago. I seceded again when I moved to Atlanta.
Well, "you can’t go home again," but you can always secede.
Bob Barth, Atlanta, Georgia
Has-been state
Seven downstate counties are considering seceding from Illinois. Their new state, the 51st in the U.S., can be named "Illinwas."
Sandra Minor, McHenry
Somber New Year
On Jan. 20, Americans will be living under a fascist regime. Don’t believe it? Donald Trump’s former chief of staff, John Kelly, a retired Marine Corps general, provides us with a succinct definition of fascism. Project 2025 and Agenda47 fill in the details.
Four years from now — IF we have a free and fair election or any election, and IF the American people reject the regime — it will take a generation to restore our democratic institutions and clean up the mess. 1930s Germany redux.
Eleanor Shunas, West Ridge
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