Motivational Monday: Try a little compassion!
(Posted on October 26, 2020)

Compassion ... Gratitude ... Judgment
We're fast approaching the season of gratitude. November is a few days away and Thanksgiving is just a few weeks away from that. This is the time of year when we gather and show gratitude for all that we have
.
Have you ever thought about gratitude and judgment in the same sentence?
How can you be judgmental if you are being grateful?
In truth...you can't—these are opposing forces.
We see a lot of patients every week and we get to know them on a very personal level. They tell us where they hurt, what their emotions are, and how their lives are going. If we were to only see them in passing in public, we'd never know these little details. These details about people's lives and backgrounds make people who they are and influence how they act.
How many times have you been grocery shopping and heard an exasperated mother dealing with her upset child? How many times have you seen someone else who is harsh and abrupt with another person? How many times have you witnessed someone driving erratically—to which you immediately determine the situation as irresponsible?
How many times do you judge these moments?
Stop and think about it for a minute. Do you randomly think to yourself: "That woman should be more compassionate with her child;" or, "Geez that dude's got an issue;" or, "That person is going to cause an accident, they should lose their license."
We all do it.
Instead, what if we approached everything with gratitude? What if we remember a day when we also felt exasperated with our children? What if we smiled at that moment and felt grateful for the memory? What if we felt compassion for the person who was being harsh and abrupt and wished him well? What if we were grateful for the erratic driver that caused us to slow down and pay more attention to the road?
What if we looked at everything that happened " TO
" us, and were grateful that it happened " FOR"
us?
We're human. We are going to lapse into judgment at times. It's part of being human. The challenge is to try and see those times when we are judging and turn them into gratitude.
Any time we find ourselves discussing someone else and what's going on with them— we are judging
.
It's not our path, it's not our journey
, and we don't have any idea what that person is feeling—or trying to learn—in that moment.
If we are profoundly concerned about another person and the journey they are on, the only thing we can do in that moment is to be grateful that it is not our journey and allow them the grace of walking their path with only our love beside them—
not our judgment
.
You can never truly understand another person's journey if you are not in their shoes. Compassion and gratitude are the only tools at our disposal to help another.
This week, let's practice noticing when we are judging a situation and try to turn it into gratitude. Let's get the season of gratitude off to a good start this year. We have everything to be grateful for!
I'm grateful for each and every one of you and the roles you are playing in my journey. THANK YOU FOR BEING A PART OF OUR FAMILY
!
The struggle ends where gratitude begins.
--Neale Donald Walsh
Sincerely,
Fatkin Natural Healing









