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Gratitude
By Bryan Taylor
“Do all you can with what you have, in
the time you have, in the place you are…”
This is a quote from a boy named Nkosi Johnson.
Nkosi was born with HIV. He died at age twelve of AIDS. He is the
subject of a new book, We Are All the Same, by veteran
ABC News correspondent Jim Wooten. It isn’t a story of Nkosi’s
death so much as a tale of an extraordinary life. He refused to
be a victim of his circumstances and chose to live the life he had
to the fullest. He was thankful for the life he had.
The holidays are a special time of year. I head
it said on the radio recently that the holiday are “the time
of year when everything that you don’t have is not as important
as the things that you do have.” Sadly it doesn’t take
long for us to fall back into our everyday normal routine and with
it our mundane everyday normal attitudes. The optimism of the New
Year, the Christmas cheer, and the gratitude of Thanksgiving slowly
fade away as we trudge through our days one at a time. It is all
too easy for us to get so caught up in our egos that we don’t
take the time to appreciate the day, to smell the roses, if you
would.
A recent article in Inside Dharma gave
me one of those moments. Leighton Bates wrote about an orange. Just
a simple piece of fruit and his mindfulness while eating it had made
it a special event. A few days after the issue came out I received
a letter from my mom. She had read Leighton’s article and
was touched by it. She said that reading his words had made her
stop and take stock of the things that she was grateful for and
realize the wonderful gifts that she had been given.
Sometimes it is so easy for me to become caught
up in my own situation, to become depressed or bitter, or to feel
sorry for myself. All it ever takes for me to snap out of it is
to look around; I quickly realize that there are so many other people
who are experiencing suffering at a level I cannot begin to comprehend.
It makes me feel petty to snivel about my own perceived injustices
when there are so many other sentient beings that live in constant
grief, those who live in poverty, those who are homeless and hungry,
and maybe the most terrifying to me, those who are alone.
Twice a year, Thanksgiving and Christmas, they
give us an orange. This year as I peeled mine, I thought of Leighton
and of my mom. I imagined that to Nkosi an orange contained a whole
world of delight as he broke it open a slice at a time—its
texture, its smell, its sweet acidity on the tongue. To Nkosi Johnson
at that moment there was no AIDS, no fear of dying—only gratitude
and the wonderful experience of mindfulness.
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