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It was a long time before I wanted to believe that I received any gifts worth keeping from this life I didn’t choose.


I knew I had tears, pain, agonizing sorrow, loss, heartache, dashed hopes, empty arms.


If I could give those back and regain my son, I would do it in less than a heartbeat.


I can’t, so I’m left here to ponder what else I’ve received from burying a child.


And I am learning that I have been given some gifts I truly cherish, although the price was higher than I would have willingly paid.


I call them grace gifts: heart-expanding, hope-enlarging.


I am learning compassion, which is something quite different than sympathy or pity which are just compassion’s paper stand-ins.


My heart is tuned to the suffering of others in a way I never knew before, even if their suffering is very different than my own.  


I have been given new eyes for the people around me.  I’m not as quick to decide I know someone’s story based on the clothes they wear or the car they drive.


I’m more patient with strugglers and stragglers although I am less patient with braggarts and bullies.


I’m more inclined to listen than I used to be.

My heart writes my “to do” list instead of my head-people over projects. 


Every. Time.


I love harder but more loosely than I did before.  I’ve learned you can only hold on to this moment, this smile, this hug,  and the rest is in God’s hands.


I am quicker to forgive-myself and others-because we are all failures in one sense or another.  


I speak blessings aloud instead of simply in my head, too embarrassed lest anyone should laugh at such an archaic tradition.


I am learning to let go of my own and others’ expectations.


I shed tears when I need to, smile when I want to, belly laugh when I can.


I’m very much NOT the person I was before Dominic ran ahead to heaven-in many ways a sadder person.  


But in many ways a wiser one as well.

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