The Secret to a Happy Life

There seems to be an epidemic these days of depression. Everyone I talk to, it is experiencing some degree of depression. As I wonder about the cause of this twenty-first century
phenomenon, I think of my great grandmother who raised my dad in the back woods of the Upper Peninsula of Michigan during the Great Depression.

She had a hard life raising twelve children and two grandchildren, seeing two die as toddlers as well as two as adults with cancer. She supported her sick husband who was twenty-two years older than she was. She struggled through the great depression, yet (according to those who knew her best) she was never depressed a day in her life! Why? Maybe because she was too busy just surviving to stop and think about feeling sad.

She came to this country from Holland as a child. She married at the age of 13. Her parents went back to Holland without telling their children. She fed her family by raising animals and a large garden, in addition to taking in boarders and caring for the elderly and sick. She sold her homebaked goods and ran the local post office. She entertained traveling preachers and live-in teachers.
She cooked on a woodstove in a house that was so cold the water in the tea
kettle would freeze during the night if she didn't get up and stoke the fire.
She could see the snow outside through the cracks in the walls. She had no
phone, no electricity, no running water, no shower, bathtub or indoor toilet!
There was no television to watch as she relaxed in the evenings. In fact, she didn't relax in the evenings. That's when she sewed the family's clothes. To listen to the radio, her family had to walk half a mile to the nearest neighbor's house. She was up
before anyone else in the morning and she was the last to go to bed at night.

Her children were the only ones in school who had real meat to eat and didn't have to take lard sandwiches in their lunches. Her kids had shoes to wear when the neighbors didn't, but they put cardboard inside those shoes to cover the holes in the soles. Though they lived in a tar paper shack, they were better off than most of the folks they knew. When beggars came to grandma's door, she
would always give them a meal and a dime, though a dime was a lot of money in
those days. She and her children rarely took baths. To do so, they had to pump
the water from the well, heat it on the stove, and fill the metal tub in the
kitchen by the fire. They never went to a doctor when they got sick. They
couldn't afford such a luxury. And in those days, there was not a whole lot
that doctors could do for them anyway. (Modern medicine has come a long way in
the last 70 years). This may sound like a story from Laura Ingalls Wilder books about the 1800's, but I'm talking about the 1930's!

My great grandma and her family rarely drove the 13 miles into town because gas was
too expensive and they couldn't all fit into the car anyway. When they did
go to town, they had to change flat tires every few miles and in the winter
they froze with no heat in the car and frequently got stuck in the snow even
though they had put chains on the tires. As a newlywed, when my
grandmother moved to her new home with her new husband, she packed all her
belongings into a horse-drawn wagon. As they drove away from her parents' home,
she said "I forgot to bring a broom." Her husband replied, "The house we'll be
living in has a dirt floor, so you won't need a broom."

This was my grandmother's life. How many of us could live like that and still
be happy? Maybe part of the reason she could be happy was that she did not have the high expectations that we have these days. She expected to lose children to death. She expected to have to work hard and not have much to show for it. She accepted whatever happened and kept going, taking each day as it came. Maybe our problem is that we cannot accept hardship when it comes because we expect our lives to be better and easier than they sometimes are.

When I compare my life to my great grandmothers, I realize that we are very fortunate to have all the good things we enjoy in our
lives. Let's count our blessings and be thankful!

During this joyous season, when we celebrate the fact that God loved us each so
much that He was willing to give up his only son to die in our place, we can be
very thankful for THAT and for many many other blessings.

Question of the Day: How many blessings can you count in your life that you
are grateful for?

Marsha Jordan, Director
HUGS AND HOPE FOUNDATION
A ministry designed to share God's Word
and His love with families of critically ill children
http://www.hugsandhope.com

Join Us! Together we can make a difference

About the Author

Marsha is a disabled grandma who lives in northern Wisconsin with her husband and toy poodle, Louie. She founded a nonprofit organization to help sick children called The Hugs and Hope Club. She enjoys collecting antiques and having fun with her grandson

More Self Improvement and Motivation and other resouces to help you locate great articles just like The Secret to a Happy Life :

Here are other categories to find more must know information on anything and everything.
Auto and Trucks
Business and Finance
Computers and Internet
Education
Environment
Family
Food and Drink
Gadgets and Gizmos
Gardening
Government
Health
Hobbies
Home Improvement
Kids and Teens
Legal Matters
Marketing
Music and Entertainment
Online Business
Parenting
Pets and Animals
Recreation and Sports
Self Improvemen
Site Promotion
Travel and Leisure
Web Development
Women
Writing
Here are more Self Improvement and Motivation articles to give you more must know information just like in The Secret to a Happy Life article.

Powerful Communication:Language: The Key that Opens or Closes that Important Door
What prevents people from using their native language or secondary languages confidently comes down to seven traps that most people fall into. Language is one of the things that sets us apart as bein...
Read more


Goal Setting: Pops Proves Its Never Too Late
Pops first set the goal in high school, but when he graduated he thought he wasn*t mature enough to pursue it so he enlisted in the U.S. Army. He dreamed about it as a member of the 82nd Airborne as...
Read more


Meatballs: Friend, or Foe?
We all have those moments, don't we? We're right in the middle of a project, and it's simply not going well. Like me, you may find yourself becoming irritated, wishing you could find an easier way t...
Read more


Career Education Options For Working Adults
Ask yourself this question: “Do I like what I do for a living?” If you answered “no”, what are you doing about it? Maybe you have a “good” job, but it’s not very rewarding to you personally. Mayb...
Read more


You're Not an Animal: Black Men Reclaim Your Dignity

A bizarre and controversial commentary that makes you think, react and say, “is that possible?” It begins with a strange premise and ends with a shocking twist you have to read to believe.

Prelude: Since 1989, much attention has been devoted to...
Read more


 

Thank you very much for viewing this must know article: The Secret to a Happy Life . Hopefully you have found all the information you were looking for in " The Secret to a Happy Life ". If you feel like you need more information feel free to check out Info Pom HOMEPAGE to look for more articles in our humangous database

Site Partners:
Background Check