Hi,
How do you feel today?
I hope you feel good.
I want to ask you a couple of questions:
How do you feel about the things that you own?
Are they just possessions, things you could easily sell at a yard sale?
Things that you wouldn’t even miss if a robber came in and stole them from you?
Things that you could give away to a charity and not think a thing about it?
Or do they mean something to you?
Something you can’t define?
Oh, not that your possessions own you instead of you owning them, that’s not what I’m saying.
What I’m getting at is that these things probably took you years to obtain, didn’t they?
Some of them are most likely heirlooms, handed down through generations.
Some things you had to save for, took time to get, even had to wait a long time for.
Some things were gifts from other people that you cherish very much.
Some things maybe your children made when they were little and, like the commercial says, are “priceless.”
There are some things you might not miss, but I bet if there were a fire in your home, the majority of things you would miss very much, wouldn’t you? And how do you feel about your house itself?
Is it just a shell? A place to “hang your hat,” so to speak? Just a place to live?
Or is it your HOME? A place that matters very much to you?
How would you feel if you lost it?
What if you had to move somewhere else?
Would you miss your home very much, or would it be easy for you to make the move?
There’s a couple that I know that are facing these very same questions right now.
As are many other people, because of the economy.
Some people are facing foreclosures, and some are even facing bankruptcy, like this couple.
They are facing the loss of their home and their possessions, which took them many years to obtain.
And it’s not their fault, really – it’s not that they’re living a lavish lifestyle or anything; in fact, they live very frugally.
But do you know what they have to say about it?
“This is awful, losing all this. But at least we still have our stability.”
You see, this couple, well, they both have bipolar disorder.
And just like you may have worked so hard for the possessions that you have…
Well, that’s how hard they have worked for the stability that they have.
In my courses/systems, I discuss just how hard you have to work to attain and maintain stability:
SUPPORTING AN ADULT WITH BIPOLAR DISORDER?
Visit:
http://www.bipolarsupporter.com/report11
SUPPORTING A CHILD/TEEN WITH BIPOLAR DISORDER?
Visit:
http://www.bipolarparenting.com
HAVE BIPOLAR DISORDER?
Visit:
In my courses, I talk about the different elements that make up stability.
Just like the gathering of possessions, it doesn’t happen overnight.
And it takes hard work to do these things.
So stability is hard fought and hard won.
So, like this couple I was talking about who are losing their home and possessions, people who have obtained stability are grateful that they have it.
But like I was saying, just because your loved one may be stable, doesn’t mean it was easy to get that way, does it?
If you are living with a stable loved one, be grateful for it.
If not, be encouraged that someday they may be.