Happiness is Letting Go

Happiness is Letting Go

happiness fight clubThe truth is, unless you let go, unless you forgive yourself, unless you forgive the situation, unless you realize that the situation is over, you cannot move forward ~ Steve Maraboli

Originally posted June 2018

One of my favorite films of all time is Fight Club, there are a lot of reasons I love this film and one of the sentiments that the narrator expresses is how Tyler Durden has, “the ability to let what truly doesn’t matter slide.” Now my friends this is a level we all should aspire to in our lives. We spend far too much time focusing on things that truly don’t matter. How many times in our day do we get angry at someone in traffic or at the grocery store, how much time to we spend mulling over this or that off-hand remark made by someone, we truly don’t care about.

We do this all of the time, let situations that don’t truly matter bring us down, let those we don’t carry about impact our mood. We’ve been programmed since childhood that appearances matter, we watched our parents worry about others opinions. We need to learn how to break this cycle, to worry less about what other people think. In the end, we live alone, we die alone, along the path of our life the only person who we have to lay down with every night is ourself, we have to be ok with ourself and we need to learn to approach the philosophy of Tyler Durden, and let what truly doesn’t matter slide.

Give yourself a hug tonight and have a happy day my friends ~ Rev Kane

Other Posts You Might Enjoy!

Worry, the Enemy of Happiness

Fear is Killing Your Happiness

Happiness is Reducing Stress

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Happy Friday with the Story People

Happy Friday with the Story People

Originally posted May, 2012

There is an artist/writer/dreamer by the name of Brian Andreas, his work was introduced to me by a dear friend and I’ve come to love what he does, the link below is to his site, they sell a lot of his stuff there and they make wonderful presents, but mostly I’m posting just for you to enjoy the images and the words, have a happy day my friends ~ Rev Kane

http://www.storypeople.com/storypeople/Home.do

 

 

Some Other Posts You Might Enjoy!

Happiness is Art: Story Telling

Happiness is Art: Chihuly

Some of my favorite Art Projects

The Paintings of Van Gogh

The Art of Monet

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Happiness and Learning from Others

Happiness and Learning from Others

I’m already to learn although I don’t always like being taught                             ~ Winston Churchill

learn

Originally posted November, 2018

Everything around us has an opportunity to teach us, sometimes by example of how to live our lives, unfortunately many times by examples of how not to live our lives. The important to thing is to watch, observe and take the appropriate lessons from what we see. One of the people in my life who continually teaches me is my friend Kim. She’s a person I greatly admire for her intelligence. Now admiring someone for their intelligence is not all that surprising except for the fact that I’m quite egotistical about my intelligence. As arrogant as it may be I rarely meet people I would consider to be smarter than myself. My friend Kim though fits this bill by truly illustrating the idea of multiple intelligences. Kim comes at the world from a completely different angle than I do. I’m very much someone who comes at the things from a hard science, hard logic perspective and for that reason people can at times truly perplex me. It is often at these times, or when I ask her to review something I’ve written, that Kim will knock me flat with her perspective. Her social science, humanistic and human centered approach often seems nearly alien to me in everything but its correctness and illumination.

Watching and learning from this example makes me a better and a happier person, I’m always happiest when I’m improving. A great example of Kim’s genius is a graduation speech she delivered, enjoy it. So look around friends, observe, learn and have a happier day ~ Rev Kane

 

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Happiness is Photography: The Himalayas

Happiness is Photography: The Himalayas

Nobody climbs mountains for scientific purposes.  Science is used to raise money for the expeditions, but you really climb for the hell of it.  ~ Sir Edmund Hillary

Chorten at Namche Bazaar

Chorten at Namche Bazaar

Originally posted November, 2013

Tonight friends, photographs from a Mt. Everest Base Camp Trek I did several years ago with Kamzang Trekking, it was a wonderful trip I recommend going with them if you plan a similar trip, and the mountains are as you can see, quite beautiful.  Enjoy the pictures and have a happy day my friends ~ Rev Kane

Second Gokyo Lake

Second Gokyo Lake

Stupa at sunset

Stupa at sunset

sunset mtns 3

snow day

The Na Valley

The Na Valley

044

Ama Dablam

Ama Dablam

Sunset at Chu Khun

500

475

Gokyo lake

Gokyo lake

glake8

Gokyo Town

Gokyo Town

smiling baby

tibetan trader 2

Tibetan Trader

tathanka

Yak on a leash

Yak on a leash

Rev Kane and a hiking friend

Rev Kane and a hiking friend

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Happiness is Floating on the Dead Sea

Happiness is Floating on the Dead Sea

 If you don’t love the sea, the sun, all the simple pleasures, what sort of life are you going to have? ~ Marty Rubin

Originally published, February 2018

I have never been able to float on my back, it was something that used to irk me quite a bit when I was a child.  My sister took to it quite easily but I could never do it.  Then, when I was eight or nine years old, I saw an episode of 60 Minutes on the Dead Sea.  The story was focused on the healing effects of the mud or something, all I really remembered from the story was that they said ANYONE, can float in the Dead Sea.

Now I’m a trained scientist, I get the science, I fully comprehend the concept of buoyancy and that given the conditions in the Dead Sea floating there should be quite easy.  It’s one thing to know something theoretically, it’s another thing to actually experience it.  So on a little bit of a chilly morning I set out down the steps of the resort to the shore of the Dead Sea.  It was in the low 50’s, so a bit chilly but the water was in the high 60’s and quite comfortable.  I stepped into the water walking on the rocks with a pair of reef shoes the bottom is not very pleasant.  I hit the point where the bottom dropped off and as I stepped forward I lost my balance a bit and BAM, my feet kicked up and there I was laying on my back, ON TOP of the water!  I started laughing like a child it was absolutely amazing.

 In the Dead Sea you float like a cork, you can literally float upright in a standing position without treading water.  I sat in the water with my legs crossed, floating like I was sitting on a pool noodle.  You’re actually so buoyant that if you tip a little to one side that side pops to the surface.  It was so much fun, had it been just a bit warmer I would have stayed in the water all day.  However, it was a little chilly and I had a head cold, so after a short float I came out of the water.

The Dead Sea is both beautiful and wild and I highly recommend it as an experience you’ll never forget, I know I never will.

  The salt formations along the shore and really beautiful.  So my friends, get out, travel and have happy days.  ~ Rev Kane

Other Posts You Might Enjoy

My 22 Days in the Himalayas

My Best Appalachian Trail Posts

My Polar Bear Adventure

My Swim with Whale Sharks

Cycling in Ireland

Mardi Gras 2016

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Resilience helps us be happy

Resilience helps us be happy

resilience, happiness, quote

I heard something this week that  really hit home, this is the 26th week of lockdown.  Hyperbole aside, it has been 26 weeks since we first had to shelter in place due to COVID.  I’ve talked in many of my COVID diary posts about the specific challenges so I feel no need to rehash them all here.  But I think it’s safe to say every one of us is under a little more pressure, has a little more stress than normal right now.  And since the challenges associated with life in COVID times are bound to be with us for awhile, one characteristic that can really help keep you happy is resilience.  More simply said, the ability to take the hits thrown at us all and be able to recover.  So I thought tonight I would be talk about how to better develop our resilience skills.

I’ve sourced a lot of what I’m going to talk about from an article on resilience in Greater Good Magazine.  The article talks about five techniques/skills that you can employ to help you build resilience.  Here they are:

Change the narrative

Almost all of us, I was shocked to read an article earlier this year that stated that some people don’t, have an inner dialogue that we run with ourselves.  Very often when we face hard times, we can get a bit obsessed with the issue we’re dealing with and focus our internal conversation on that issue.  Well something that the authors suggested, and that I can personally vouch for is the power of writing.  The exercise that they recommend is doing 20 minutes of free writing on the topic your obsessing about.  Basically you just write whatever comes into your mind about the topic.  Doing this several days in a row has been shown to make people feel happier months after the event.  I personally don’t think there is anything magic about the length of time.  For me, I’ve done this for a very long time, what’s important is burning off the energy you have around what’s stressing you.  So take some time and a blank sheet a paper to just write about COVID, homeschooling, trying to balance work, COVID, homeschooling all at once, whatever your personal stressor is at this time.  Don’t censor yourself, don’t beat yourself up about what you write.  Then after, shred, rip or burn up the paper.  You may write things that others would find unflattering or that you feel the same about, it’s ok, it’s about burning off the energy and getting it out of your system.

Face your fears

This to me is one of the bigger long-term ways to build resilience and something I’ve done a lot of in my life.  We all have have anxieties and fears.  What’s important is developing the sense in your life that you can overcome those fears.  That feeling allows you to begin to minimize your anxiety around the things you can’t control, and to truly face an eliminate fears you have around things you can control.  The method here is to gradually do things that push you out of your comfort zone and make you nervous.  This doesn’t mean that you go out tomorrow and sky dive, but to do small things every day that make you uncomfortable so that you begin to get that feeling of overcoming things that make you anxious.  This can lead to the ability to take on really big things, huge adventures most wouldn’t even consider.  Let me give you a very concrete example from my own life.

If you’ve been reading this blog for any length of time you probably know that five years ago I hiked a thousand miles on the Appalachian Trail.  Prior to undertaking that I had never done an unsupported overnight hike in my entire life and I was setting out to do it every day for six months.  But I didn’t just wake up one day, decide to do that and set out. I worked up to it over ten years and a lot of steps.  First, I was a day hiker, so I spent time doing day hikes in increasingly tougher terrain, in more unfamiliar places.  Every time you go on a hike in a new place, especially someplace remote, there’s anxiety.  But after you’ve done it a bunch of times that anxiety turns mostly into excitement.  Then I went on supported long-distance hikes.  I hiked something called the Great Glenn Way in Scotland.  I hiked for a week but each night I was in a nice bed and breakfast and the end of each day of hiking.  This then lead to a huge adventure, a 30 day fully supported hike in Nepal to go to base camp on Mt. Everest.  We didn’t have to carry much weight, there were sherpas supporting us, guides and we were incredibly well taken care of.  But there was a new element, hiking at elevation, up to 18,000 feet, to deal with.  After these adventures, and with a lot of self-education, I was ready to tackle with Appalachian Trail.  This is not to say with something this huge there was no anxiety, there was a lot.  But most things we tackle daily don’t involve completely turning your life upside down, quitting your job, becoming homeless and living in the woods for months at time with lions, tigers and bears.  Ok, just bears, but I love that line.

My point in this example is that anything that your anxious about you can tackle.  But take it slow, do small things that stress you and learn from successfully doing them, by doing that you develop the ability to take on even bigger things.  I promise regularly doing these sorts of things will make you more resilient.

Practice self compassion

I’ve taken the following straight out of the article:

One practice, the Self-Compassion Break, is something you can do any time you start to feel overwhelmed by pain or stress. It has three steps, which correspond to the three aspects of self-compassion:

  • Be mindful: Without judgment or analysis, notice what you’re feeling. Say, “This is a moment of suffering” or “This hurts” or “This is stress.”

  • Remember that you’re not alone: Everyone experiences these deep and painful human emotions, although the causes might be different. Say to yourself, “Suffering is a part of life” or “We all feel this way” or “We all struggle in our lives.”

  • Be kind to yourself: Put your hands on your heart and say something like “May I give myself compassion” or “May I accept myself as I am” or “May I be patient.”

I think this is really great.  We need to be kinder to ourselves, especially when we’re stressed and under pressure.  As the article recommends we have to be mindful of reality, you’re being put under pressure, acknowledge it and remember it’s ok.  Remember others have been here before, maybe you’ve been here before.  There’s help to get through this, there’s information, family and friends who you can reach out to if you need.  Finally, be kind to yourself, treat yourself like you would treat your best friend if they were in the same situation.

Meditate

I’m a big fan of meditation, and it’s something I need to do more of myself.  I’m a terrible meditator.  The key point is to quiet your mind and I have a very hard time doing that.  The article offers several really good meditations you can use, even if you’re not a good meditator.  More than everything else though, it’s about taking time and just stopping.  There’s a TV commercial I really like right now, it’s an image of dripping leaves in a forest in the rain.  It says, do nothing for 30 seconds and a little graphic timer runs down the time.  That 30 seconds seems like a long time, that’s when I know I need to take a break from everything for a bit.  Even just five minutes, whenever you can sneak it in between all of the madness in your life is beneficial.  You can Google, five, ten, twenty minute meditations.  I prefer the ones that are just nature sounds.  Just take the time to stop, relax, let it all go.  If you can work up to better and deeper meditations great, but be kind to yourself and just stop once a day and give yourself a break.

Cultivate forgiveness

Finally, if interpersonal issues are what are making it difficult for you to more easily bounce back from things that happen to you, forgiveness is the way.  I say that from the experience of spending a good part of my life as a young man being very angry.  The anger and it’s impacts contributed to my life spiraling out of control.  It was certainly a factor that led me to alcoholism and addiction.  It took decades to get to a place where I was free of that anger and able to practice forgiveness.  It’s not easy, but the better you get at this, quite frankly, the happier you’ll be.  There are some excellent suggestions in the article for how to get better at forgiveness.

Hopefully my words tonight, and the resource I’ve provided can help you develop more resilience, help you better deal with our difficult times and help you have happier days my friends. ~ Rev Kane

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Take a Deep Breath, Move Forward

Take a Deep Breath, Move Forward

1We keep moving forward, opening new doors, and doing new things, because we’re curious and curiosity keeps leading us down new paths.            ~ Rev Kane

Originally posted August, 2019

Transitions and changes seem ever-present and in the last year and I have certainly self-imposed a ton of those on myself.  The gears will certainly be shifting in 2016, unfortunately I didn’t become independently wealthy this year so it will be back to work.  I’ll be heading back west in the early part of the year and starting the job search.  At some point I’ll even have a normal place to live, I have to admit, I’m looking forward to living someplace for the first time in 15 months where I actually control the thermostat!

This week I left my speedy and overactive mind get ahead of itself as it is want to do.  I was already calculating that I have a trip in mid-January, one at the end of January, the holidays are here and the book’s not done.  I was feeling very much like I’m out of time and have not accomplished the big goal, getting the book done.  Time to take a breath.

01I started meditating again this week, it’s so silly how I can get out of the habit of doing something that I enjoy and is so good for me.  I’ve also had my head spinning over a long-standing relationship and have unfortunately gone to ground like I do, rebuilding the walls around myself that protect me.  The cumulative effect though has been to calm my brain down and get me to breathe and look around with a better eye.

I have six weeks left to work on the book here (I’ve only been here 5 weeks), I’ll have extra time around Christmas.  I had a ton of blog work to catch up on and that’s done so I can be more focused on the book.  Also, about two-thirds of the writing is done and some of the organizing, so I’m not in bad shape to have that first solid rough draft knocked off before I leave.  Finally, I can still work on it while on the road heading west and while I’m looking for a job.  I really hope to have it into the publishing process by June but that’s new road for me, so it may take some time.

01

As much as I really hate this time of year I move forward with the reality that life is really good right now, I’ll be at the beach for Christmas, one of my favorite places – St. Joseph’s Bay in Florida.  The welcome letter to the house I’m renting talked about snakes, turtles, dolphins and bears, a perfect little mix of forest and beach.

So tonight my friends take your own deep breath, this time of year makes people nuts.  You don’t have to be perfect, your house doesn’t have to be spotless, the gifts, whatever they are, or no gift at all will be fine. And if you get silly questions just laugh.

02So sit down, smile, relax, have a little eggnog, watch the sunset and have a happy day my friends ~ Rev Kane

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My COVID Times Diary – A day in the life

My COVID Times DiaryA day in the life

covid times, apocalypse

10AM today in the California Bay Area

We cannot change anything until we accept it. Condemnation doesn’t liberate it oppresses. ~ Carl Jung

So as I said in the first COVID Times Diary post that I did, part of the reason I’m writing these is for historical purposes.  I want, years from now, for people to be able to read about what was happening in my life during this truly historic time.  Particularly my young nieces and nephews who will only somewhat remember what it was like.

Today was one of days.  As you can see from the image above, when I opened my door for the first time this morning it was a different world.  One advantage of working from home is that I can sleep in.  I hope to start work each day at 9AM, like I did on campus.  Most days that means waking up at 8, checking email, getting ready and starting work by 9.  When I woke up this morning it was still dark in my apartment, really dark.  I knew there was a small chance of rain and so I thought it must be dark and cloudy.  Once I got up and moving I decided to look out the door, wow.  The sky was yellow!  To say it looked apocalyptic would be to downplay what it not just looked, but actually felt like.  I started work and at about 10AM took another look outside, it was darker and even more eerie, the sky, as you can see above had gone to a dark pumpkin color.  A really interesting coincidence was that I had thawed out some homemade pumpkin soup for lunch, the sky matched the color of my soup.

The skies are a result of unprecedented fires on the west coast, according to the news, the smoke overhead was actually from the fires in Oregon, not California.  And while there are insanely fast moving and massive fires in Oregon, we have the same thing occurring in the central valley of California.  In the last couple of days, small towns in Oregon and Washington have burned to the ground, Medford Oregon had 10,000 people evacuationing.  The national guard airlifted 200 hikers and campers out of a campground surrounded by fire in California.  Turns out there are hundreds still sheltering and trapped due to fire closed roads in the same area.

Today I talked with an employee who is waiting on COVID test results and learned of two students who are quarantining because of COVID exposure.  Today will also be the 14th and final day of a friend’s quarantine for the same reasons.  Tonight the board for our college will start the process of making it official that we will not be on campus in the spring.  This means we will be working for home for at least 15 months.  A promising vaccine trial for Astrazeneca was put on hold today due to a severe problem with a person receiving the vaccine.  The news also broke a story that claims the President of the United States purposefully downplayed COVID risks for political reasons.

Six months into the pandemic, life in many ways has returned to something resembling normal.  Masks are the order of the day so things absolutely look a bit different.  If not for the masks, on the surface things look pretty normal.  Well, except for the sky today.   But if you look closer you can see all of the little places where the differences show up. The self-check registers at the grocery store only take credit cards because there is a coin shortage due to people spending less in person.  You can’t bring your own shopping bags into the store anymore.  There are ever changing shortages.  Not in terms of not getting food, but in certain items and variety disappearing.  Not the mass shortages of last March but little changes.  Barley right now is not available in stores locally, tofu and tofu based items from time to time are out.  Today, I could only find giant family sized breakfast sausage links and the vegetarian sausage links have rarely been in stock and are up about a dollar in price.  Single sized cans of vegetables are rare, corned beef hash recently has become incredibly sparse and frequently out of stock.

Life right now is not what I would call hard for most of us.  Now, for the people who have lost their job or who own a struggling small business, it is very difficult.  But for most of us, things are not hard, but I think tense is a good term.  People are very stressed and uncomfortable and so when you add in anything else, a local protest turning violent, wildfires, yellow skies, or all of the above, it can push people near their breaking point.  The thing about everyone being under pressure is that it reveals people, who they really are, what they can handle.  Add into the mix the most contentious presidential election in my lifetime and it’s a lot.

Today I heard a lot of nervousness in people’s voices in meetings, in their comments on email and texts.  It was unnerving to see a sky that you have only ever seen before as the backdrop in apocalyptic films.  It even had me a bit freaked, thank god for the internet, information and science that explained what it was.  A hundred years ago, waking up to these skies would have had us all sacrificing animals to the sky gods.  It now seems like it’s not if another disaster will occur, but what disaster will occur next, we spend all of our time waiting for the next shoe to drop. ~ Michael ‘Rev’ Kane

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A little pause on the coast

A little pause on the coast

My mission in life is to not just merely survive, but to thrive; and to do so with some passion, some compassion, some humor and some style. ~ Maya Angelou

Originally posted January, 2019

So, as someone who writes a blog on happiness you might think that of course I’m just yippy-skippy happy all the time.  That of course is not the case, and if you’ve read this blog for any amount of time, you know that’s not how I roll.  Maybe it should be what I do, I’m sure if everything was about being fantastically happy all of the time and how to be that way, I’d have a lot more readers and page views.  Which also would then to translate me monetizing the site and making money off of it.  As you can tell, this thought has in fact crossed my mind.  However, that has never really been what the Ministry of Happiness has been about and I have more respect for all of you than to do that.  My goal has always been to portray an honest appraisal of my life and the things I’ve researched, tried and experienced in trying to live a happier life.

So of course, because I’m human and like most humans, not living in a constant state of happiness and bliss, at times I write about being less than happy.  As I’ve discussed a number of times on the site, I used to suffer from depression fairly regularly, I’m happy to say that I’ve beaten that back and rarely find myself in the type of well I used to regularly have to crawl out of just to function.  But right now I find myself in an interesting and not all that comfortable of a place.

beach, sunsetFirst, let me be clear, I have a great life.  I’m fortunate to have a few friends I can truly count on, I have people who love me, and people who think positively about me.  I’ve worked hard to put myself into a place where I get to do a lot of things people wish they could.  I have the opportunity to travel to amazing places, I mean just this year I spent time in Spain, Portugal, Morocco and Mexico.

But I find myself in a weird place right now.  I’m staying at the beach in Gulf Shores, Alabama.  I’ve got a great place across the street from the beach and my days are pretty good.  I get to walk the beach every day, I have a gym nearby so I’m working out daily and I’m actually eating more healthily than I have for a while.  My goal was to come here to do a few things, get my job search rolling which is coming along, albeit slowly.  But also to do some writing and I find myself, oddly, with the time but no motivation.  None of the projects I have to work on are inspiring the passion I need to dive into them.  Maybe, it’s just a glitch and my recent illness, I actually lost my voice for the first time in my life, has just not run its full course yet.  Maybe I was just tired and needed a break.

beach, sunsetHowever I feel there is something deeper involved, something that’s been gnawing at me for a while, a lack of anything to be passionate about.  Again, great life, but there is nothing driving me right now, I’m not in love, what I do for work is good, but not rewarding on a significant level, and there is no cause or idea I’m incredibly passionate about right now.  What I really need, I think, is just several days of really long conversation with someone I trust, but that is just not an option.  And that simple fact has me feeling a bit lonely.

sunset, beach, photographyLook, we all want to be happier, but at times things just aren’t going to be what we want them to be.  That’s ok, we have to take value from the positive things in our life, push ahead on the things we have to do, and look for opportunities to make a change.  The really good news, is that I’m sure what’s missing right now is something that is completely my fault.  The reason that is good news, is that if it’s my faulty, it’s under my control and I can make the changes necessary.  To be honest my friends, that’s usually the case, so stay positive, look for those change opportunities and have a happy day. ~ Rev Kane

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The Importance of Courage and Openness

The Importance of Courage and Openness

courage, quoteThe secret to happiness is freedom…the secret to freedom is courage.                ~ Thucydides

Originally posted January, 2018

So I’ve discussed recently that I’ll soon be taking some time off again.  There are a number of options that sit before me.  I’ve considered doing a bit of vagabonding, possibly moving to Mexico for a couple of months, I’m having conversations about some business ventures with a friend and doing some hiking.

The thing is that now I’ve taken the first step and resigned my position, I’ve let myself become open to things, honestly open to consider almost anything.  It has always been my contention and it’s echoed by Paulo Coehlo’s book the Alchemist, that when you make the effort, the universe does whatever possible to make your dreams come true.

As such some positive little things have been popping up, just yesterday I stumbled into an opportunity to teach English in Taipei including salary and room and board.  An idea that I’m actually pretty excited about.

Right now things are utterly chaotic for me, there is no plan, as of July 1st I don’t know where I’ll be living or if I’ll be living anywhere.  I don’t know if I’ll be solely focused on a new business venture, vagabonding across the US or moving to Taiwan.  It’s all a bit terrifying, but that’s where the courage comes in.  But in the process staying open to what life has to offer seems to be bringing me some great opportunities if not a lot of certainty at the moment.

This all comes back to the idea of getting out of your comfort zone to find change in your life.  I’m a planner, having everything so up in the air is uncomfortable as hell and definitely outside of my comfort zone, but that’s what also makes it so exciting.  As we’ve talked about here before if you’re not happy where you are in life than you have to make a change, change is uncomfortable but often leads to really wonderful things.  So have the courage to make that positive change in your life and have a happy day my friends.

~ Rev Kane

Other Happiness Posts You Might Enjoy!

Fear is Killing Your Happiness

Overcoming Demons to be Happy

Making Change Happen

 

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