Grateful Heart Monday

It’s time for another entry in my Grateful Heart Monday series, a series which continues to focus on only one thing, that being an important piece of gratitude from my life, which for today is for no longer being afraid to cry in front of others.

A long time ago, I was taught that if you were going to be a “real man” in this world, you should never cry in front of others. That grown men should not openly display this type of emotion in the world. My mother was the first to tell me this and she often did her best to help me grow into those big boy pants, to make me tough, and never show any vulnerability like that. I did pretty well with it for many years, even taking Tae Kwon Do and becoming a brown belt to be strong. Later, I learned that alcohol and drugs were also great ways to keep those vulnerable emotions suppressed. On the really heaving drinking and drugging days though, when I went too far with the substances I was consuming, my emotions got the best of me and I’d often end up in a torrent of tears about all the insecurities of my life. I’d always blame the alcohol and drugs of course the next day and toughen right back up, vowing to not allow myself to ever do that again. I did of course time and time again, but only when I was under the influence.

When I finally got sober from alcohol and drugs, and had nothing to suppress those emotions anymore, I went to the next best thing, anti-depressants and anti-anxiety medications, mostly because I started crying all the time and didn’t want anyone to see that. I honestly believed from what I was taught that it made me weak and I wanted to remain strong, So, I tried my best even sober, to never openly shed my tears.

I took that to the extreme, like I have most things in my life, and rarely did I show my tears, even when my father took his life or when my mother took her tragic drunken fall down the stairs. I began to use other addictions to numb myself from those deep emotions and pain and paid the price for that, as I eventually learned that putting a stopper in those feelings and holding all those painful emotions down, only led to me becoming an angry and rage-filled individual, someone who walked around in the world with a major chip on his shoulder.

The only individuals I ever really let see the real side of me for much of my life were those I fell in love with and a few therapists I saw. To the rest of the world though, I hid my true self, someone who deep down was a hurt little boy who always felt sad and alone. When I finally came to terms with that and realized how much damage it was causing my mental, emotional, spiritual, and even physical health, I began working on opening those flood gates. To do so meant walking away from a number of other addictions that only suppressed those emotions.

The past eight years or so, I’ve done pretty well with this and have really worked hard to show my vulnerability. I still have my good days with it and some bad days. On the good days, like just tonight for example, when I was hanging out with a good friend of mine, I let the tears fall from my face and it was rather healing and connecting with my friend. On those bad days, when I don’t want to take that wall down around my heart, I tend to yell and cause arguments, trying to create separation with those I love, all because of the fear of getting hurt, something I know all too well throughout much of my life with abandonment and loneliness.

But, the reality is I know it’s ok to cry now and how healthy it is as well, not just alone on my knees on the side of my bed, but everywhere. While I do cry more than not these days about the state of my life with my health, especially in the morning when I awake and am alone with all my pain and all that angst it causes me, I am thankful I can express it more openly now too. I do so with plenty of others in my life, to the groups I speak to, to my close friends and even those who aren’t friends at all. I am authentic now in my life in my emotions more than not, and for that I am so very grateful. Because at the core, showing my tears, allowing my tears, for the world to see, while my mother long ago would have said grown men don’t do that type of thing and that it makes one weak, I see otherwise. Showing my tears actually make me strong, strong in myself for being true to me, and strong in showing to other men that there really is a strength that comes from expressing feelings like that with another.

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

Grateful Heart Monday

Welcome to another Grateful Heart Monday, where I always write about a piece of gratitude from my life, which for today is for something that came out of a friend’s pandemic house cleaning.

I’m sure many of us have done various pandemic projects around their home during the last year given how this pandemic has kept us more at home than not. I know that’s the case for me at least and thankfully for a friend of mine as well, who during some of his own clearing out of piles of stuff discovered a slew of gift certificates from Cold Stone Creamery.

I love Cold Stone Creamery and occasionally go there and get a treat for myself, especially after a long day. So, when my friend handed me a stack of paper gift certificates from them, I was ecstatic, until I saw they had expired way back in 2005! But, I said what the heck and went to Cold Stone not too long after receiving them from my friend and tried to use one of the eighteen $5 paper vouchers. It didn’t take long for the manager there to see the expiration was from 16 years ago. She actually laughed that I had tried to use one. I told her it was worth a try and she suggested I contact their corporate if I wanted to pursue it further. Hell, why not I said. So, I did. I contacted their corporate by opening a ticket through their email system and followed that up with a phone call a few days later.

I had zero expectations that my contact to Cold Stone corporate was going to achieve anything and assumed they would probably just tell me the same thing the store manager had, that they were just too old. I was pleasantly surprised though when the same manager who had turned them down the first time contacted me and said her corporate had given approval to honor them. She asked me to come into the store as soon as I could, so I opted to do so the very same day, as I wasn’t convinced it was actually going to happen.

Sure enough, that manger took my certificates and gave me a $90 plastic gift card that had no expiration date and even threw in two free ice creams that day for me and my friend Rob who was with me at the time.

I guess it goes to show that sometimes good things do happen when you least expect it, as I most assuredly didn’t expect gift certificates with expirations dates of over 16 years ago to be honored. I’m grateful I have a personality that pursues silly things like this, even when to most others, they’d probably have been thrown away after the first rejection. And I’m grateful as well that I now have a lot of ice cream treats ahead of me to enjoy this summer for free!!!

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

Grateful Heart Monday

Welcome to another Grateful Heart Monday, where gratitude is always the focus of my writing, which for today is for another big milestone I just passed with this blog, TheTwelfthStep.

When I first began this blog, I had only one goal in mind and that was to share an entry every single day within it, as it was initially intended to be an online diary of sorts about my spiritual journey in life. The fact that I started this blog well over 8 years ago now and have continued to keep it going ever since is a feat in itself. But maintaining it with an entry per day has been a significant challenge over the years, especially during the many dark periods I’ve had to face and went through quite painfully. The number of days where the pain was so great, where I just wanted to give up on this blog, or at the very minimum, take a long break from it, have been countless. Yet, God has helped me somehow to keep going with it, one entry at a time. Sometimes, I don’t even know where that energy comes from to keep this going for as long as I have, but wherever it’s come from has helped me to finally achieve consecutive 3000 entries and counting!

3000 consecutive days of logging into this blog and sharing something with the world from my life is absolutely something to be grateful for. Honestly, it’s hard to fathom how I’ve remained dedicated to a task that often isn’t very rewarding, especially when readers at times have criticized what I’ve shared, as each of my shares come from my heart. But I thank God for the readers who have connected to my words and have shared how blessed they were by them, who have continued to follow my daily musings day after day. Because it’s each of you that has helped me to achieve reaching this milestone of 3000 consecutive postings. What’s ironic is that initially I was meant to do this in a “Dear Diary” type of way at home via a journal, as my spiritual teacher once suggested that. Yet, I know I wouldn’t have lasted this long doing this in such a fashion.

Nevertheless, there are plenty of things I’ve tried to keep doing in life but gave up on them not long after I started them. Vows I made to myself, promises I swore I’d keep, and tasks that I really wanted to ensure I’d never give up on, each always thrown to the wayside after varying lengths of time, none even close to this recent milestone. That’s why surpassing 3000+ consecutive entries in this blog is such an incredible feat for myself and most assuredly something to be grateful for.

The fact is, it’s reaching this feat that shows I have an inner strength, a strong fortitude, and a fierce determination of sorts, one that has kept TheTwelfthStep going, one entry at a time, one day at a time. Sharing about my life day after day after day has rarely been easy, but thanks be to God I continue to do it, 3000 consecutive entries and growing, one word at a time, I truly am filled with immense gratitude and dedicate today’s Grateful Heart Monday to a feat I never thought I’d achieve.

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