Tag: gratitude

  • Merry Christmas

    This Christmas eve I went to bed alone. I woke up early and my pet dog Sage greeted me. It the two of us and we have the whole apartment to ourselves. Sometimes I miss being around family and friends during Christmas. I imagine young children waking up safe and sound warm and dry, clean and with enough good food to eat. With many gifts from their family and friends waiting for them to open around their decorated Christmas tree. My imagination brings me joy and hope and good will towards humanity.

    I know many men women and children are waking up today cold and wet in soiled clothes and hungry having slept outside. I hope and pray for peace and comfort for them today and in the New Year.

    I am very fortunate to have a safe and warm home with a heater and plumbing and electricity in a safe neighborhood. And I’m fortunate that my kitchen is stalked with fresh nutritious foods.

    I’m grateful that I have work. I am grateful for the many men and women who volunteered and donated money and food and their time to charities I benefited from that helped keep me alive when I was homeless.

    I am grateful to live in USA, the country I am from and grew up in. I am grateful for the many things Americans have in United States like a stable Government, police and firefighters, hospitals and Doctors and Military protecting us.

    I am grateful that USA is a powerful country and I hope American US citizens can use our power to help other countries with less means to care for and protect their people.

    Before I was homeless I worked full time for many years starting at age 15. I paid income taxes on my work accomplished and I’m grateful to be a recipient of Social Security Disability Insurance. I’m grateful I can afford to pay for my medication that helps my mental health. I’m grateful my insurance covers my meetings with a Therapist I elected to meet with regularly. I live very far away, half way across the country from my closest in distance family. I am no longer a young boy and making friends in my local community is not as basic as it was in my home town many years ago.

    I’m grateful for my co-workers I’m getting to know better. I’m grateful for a local organization I’ve volunteered with and for my friends I’ve made volunteering together.

    I’m grateful I have the opportunity to earn as much money as possible and if and when I earn enough money will no longer qualify to receive SSDI. This is my opportunity. I am physically strong and able bodied. My mental health is very important to me and taking medication to reduce negative symptoms of my mental health is working.

    I’m grateful I own a car and do all my shopping and buy groceries and run errands and drive to work and to visit places in town and further away.

    I am grateful for the people I meet almost every day in town when I go to buy a cup of hot coffee in a cafe and when I shop in stores.

    I have so many things to be grateful for. I’m grateful I was able to start over from owning only the clothes I wore on my back to leasing an apartment I’ve filled with my possessions I’ve bought and gathered such as a cluster of sea shells I picked up on a beach.

    I’m grateful my ability to develop websites I kept although on hold through the years homeless I am currently using to give back to the local community. To learn about my new project helping to feed homeless people and people experiencing food insecurity in this region visit the website at https://nourishlink.org

    I hope to build Nourish Link with the help of many people who have skills that I don’t posses and bring insight and strength to the project beyond what I alone have began. I hope Nourish Link helps to feed many thousands of people in need of food support.

    I hope you and your loved ones are safe and warm.

    JAG

  • I’m glad Thanksgiving day is over

    Americans throughout United States are encouraged to come together and share meals together on Thanksgiving day. I think the idea is great and it is also a cause of a lot of unwanted pressure.

    This Thanksgiving I was home alone with my pet dog. I ate good food and took my dog for a walk at a nearby park.

    I miss my family who are all very far away. I could not afford to travel to be with my family on Thanksgiving day.

    That’s ok, there will be many more visits and vacations I share with my family.

    Americans have many stories about Thanksgiving. One is that early settlers from Europe and Native Americans came together and shared food. While that may be true, early European settlers were the aggressors in many battles against Native Americans. Many Native Americans were killed and their land was taken from them.

    My ancestors are European and settled in United States many generations ago. Certainly some of my ancestors were the cause of Native Americans grief and loss of life and land.

    I wouldn’t change Thanksgiving and I am also sensitive to Native Americans and their struggle for equality. Native Americans deserve to have the same rights and opportunities as those of us from European settler ancestors.

    Native Americans are US Citizens and deserve the same rights as all US Citizens. Native Americans deserve to own and live on their ancestral lands that they govern when they choose to and to live anywhere in the Americas.

    Native Americans culture is beautiful and sacred and well and alive throughout United States and the Americas.

    Unfortunately Native Americans have been discriminated against by non-native Americans for hundreds of years.

    Americans young and old do the world a favor by respecting and caring for Native Americans so they may live in peace where they wish and prosper in their own communities and in society side by side all Americans.

    No one is illegal on stolen land.

    Immigrants make America great.

    Peace and love