Grateful Heart Monday

Welcome to my last Grateful Heart Monday entry in a series that began years ago that has truly touched my life and countless others along the way, as I begin my final week of writing for TheTwelfthStep before I take a much-needed break from it.

I’ve worked hard on expressing gratitude in a life that has been extremely challenging over the past decade. What my mind and body has endured has been beyond words at times, yet somehow deep within me, I continue to find ways to thank God for what I still have. And one of those ways was through this Grateful Heart Monday series, where I wanted to show the rest of the world, and not just privately through my journals, that expressing gratitude is an important part of living life.

I’ve now written 260 articles on gratitude since I began this series, and could write countless others, I’m sure. While I will continue to go on expressing gratitude day in and day out in all the ways I have been doing for years now, it’s time to come to a close for this one at least and I will miss writing this series probably more so than all those other ways combined.

While it’s one thing to write down 10 statements of gratitude within my journals each day over the past 15 years, finding enough words from a single piece of gratitude to compose an entire article on it has most assuredly been a challenging venture, but a very rewarding one.

I cannot express how important remaining grateful has been for my spiritual journey and my spiritual growth. It may very well be the foundation of what has kept me going at times, when everything has felt so damn upside down in my life for far too many years now. It may also be the very reason why I still have the unshakeable faith I do in God, something that someone I love deeply had to remind me of and who brings a glow within me each time they do.

I find myself now looking for God in more and more things by continuing to practice gratitude in ways that include what this series has been. Because if you live a very ungrateful life, complaining about this and that, judging this and that, and pointing fingers at what you think is wrong in this world, you probably aren’t going to seek God or anything Greater than yourself.

This is why I love being grateful and that God led me to starting this Grateful Heart Monday series to share with the rest of the world something that has truly touched my heart and soul along the way. As I end my final entry to this series, I pray each of you will continue practicing remaining grateful in your own lives, as I know in doing so, you’ll find a much Higher Path, a much Higher Calling, and yourself living in much Higher Ways…

Peace, love, light, and joy,
Andrew Arthur Dawson

Question For The Day

Today’s question is…

If you’ve ever had to go through a long period of either feeling alone, unloved, or tremendous grief, what has kept you going?

Peace, love, light, and joy,
Andrew Arthur Dawson


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Because I Keep Getting Asked, I Need To Talk About Suicide Today…

I have been asked quite a few times lately whether I’m suicidal due to how I’ve been writing and sharing about my life on social media and in my blog. Having had both my parents end their lives in that way, with many who know me or have read my writings over the past 10 years already knowledgeable of this painful part of my past, I get the concern. This is why today’s article is about this difficult subject, one in which I choose to discuss precisely how I feel about ending my life in this way.

Are there days lately that I find myself crying out to God that I wish to die? I’d be lying if I said there weren’t. Are there days that I have pondered at moments various ways to check out of this plane of existence? I’d be lying if I said there weren’t. And are there days that I have let the feelings of being so alone and unloved in one romantic relationship after another get the best of me, where I start thinking life would be far better dead than alive? I’d be lying if I said there weren’t.

Having had two parents end their lives by their own hands makes it very easy to ponder questions like this, especially when my raw emotions and the physical pain I continue to endure at heightened levels get the best of me. What’s even worse is remembering this psychiatrist who once told me ages ago that I had a 60 percent chance of following in my parent’s shoes because of the way they both ended their lives. I think about that psychiatrist’s words a lot lately. And I do mean A LOT. But does that mean I am thinking about taking my life? The answer is no.

Let me be clear in saying that people who talk about suicide, who threaten suicide, or discuss it openly are far less at risk for actually taking their lives than those who don’t talk about it. Typically, those who talk about it are feeling mostly void of having unconditional love in their lives and are seeking greater connection to someone who may be able to offer it.

Personally, what I long the most in life is to be unconditionally loved by one single romantic companion because I have endured a lifetime of feeling unloved ever since beginning it with two parents who never knew how to give love freely. And because of that, I recreated my childhood codependency in one relationship after another where I unconditionally loved the person I fell in love with far more than any love I ever got back. While I eventually learned how to give that type of love to myself, that has never taken away my longing to still be loved unconditionally by someone who will embrace my heart and never let go. I don’t believe any of us are meant to go through life without experiencing this, never having someone to enjoy this type of deep romantic love with. And never having experienced this after so many failed relationships, I often find myself thinking that death would be far better than life, except that doesn’t mean I’m actually going to take my life.

I can’t say the same though for those who hurt equally as bad or worse and think about taking their lives but never talk about it at all. It’s people like this who are most at risk. My parents never talked about any of their pain and both ended their lives by their own hands leaving two kids to pick up the pieces that remained, trying to find some type of unconditional love for themselves to keep going.

Sometimes I think my sister and I have never fully recovered from the blow of our parent’s tragic deaths, given how incredibly painful each were for us. While we’ve both done a tremendous amount of healing work to keep going, it still hasn’t taken away the void left behind from the lack of unconditional love we never got from them, especially in the way their lives ended, as suicide is a very unloving act. Add in the lifetime of never receiving that type of love in each of our romantic relationships, where it’s constantly showed up more in the form of a carrot dangling at the end of a stick, always just out of reach, it’s made for a very difficult existence. I’m thankful though to have witnessed many beautiful couples who have expressed this type of love to each other, like my friend Melissa and her dearly departed husband Ken, as they showed me true unconditional love does exist.

So, while I’ve often pondered death not ever knowing that type of love in any of my relationships, I know I still have a great calling on this planet and won’t give darkness the satisfaction of me checking out prematurely. I trudge on and keep one deep hope alive, and that is to have one single soul, one being, by my side, to unconditionally love me in a way I’ve never been, not once, in my entire life, except what I learned to give myself. I deserve that type of love from another, and I know God would say I do as well. And although I haven’t gotten that yet and often think lately of just giving up on life altogether, I’m NOT going to take my life. I’m just choosing to share the depth of my pain and my truth with the world, something God has helped me learn to do so transparently, and something my parents never did. And I know in doing so, I won’t let happen to me, what happened to them…

Peace, love, light, and joy,
Andrew Arthur Dawson