I used to pray the serenity
prayer constantly. I was dissatisfied
with life and felt like I had a lot to change about myself. I tried to take control and put my nose to
grindstone. I rarely was
successful. So I prayed. I prayed, “God grant me the serenity to
accept the things I cannot change, the courage to change the things I can, and
the wisdom to know the difference.”
However serenity remained elusive.
I was always stressed out and frustrated.
Today however, I was praying at
the Midway Airport chapel just before I returned to Ghana to begin my two years
of Peace Corps service and realized the serenity prayer didn’t make sense
anymore in my life. I’m so happy and at
peace! I’ve found some serenity. There is very little that I want to change
about my life, how I’m sending my time, and who I’m spending it with. I acknowledge that some of the changes that I
desired a few years ago have come about and that has increased my peace and
satisfaction in life. However as I
contemplate what else is going on in my life I realize that my focus of life
has changed as well. I believe that
change of focus has been as important to my pursuit of happiness as some of the
other more tangible changes I’ve made.
There is very little planning, worrying, or goal setting happening in my
life right now. I’m living present to
the moment and grounded in the now, not the tomorrow, next week, or next
year. I’m simply enjoying the ride and
facing obstacles and challenges as they come.
There are very few crises and mass confusion too because by living only
in the present moment I am fully aware and able to address whatever is
happening in the seconds that are going by.
Tomorrow cannot be dealt with today and that took a long time to learn.
A friend also helped me realize that
already my time in Ghana has contributed to this change within me. So much of my life is different here, from
the littlest detail of eating with my hands, to big structural things like not
having utilities of water, electricity, gas, or sewerage. Most of these changes in lifestyle are small
obstacles and they are occurring every minute of every day. They were very noticeable and sometimes
jarring, at least they were for the first few months here as you acculturate
and become accustom to them. However, rather
than seeing them as challenges and letting them overwhelm me which I would have
done in the past, I took them up one at a time, slowly in each moment of the
day, and just remained as present to each one as I could. This new style of living by just doing what I
could in the moment, enjoying the moment, and celebrating it has consumed me
and become a persistent and consistent way of being. So the serenity prayer
doesn’t really make sense in Ghana because I’m not going to change any of the
Ghanaian lifestyle, systems, or culture while I’m here, I just need to live in
it moment by moment.
I used to pray the serenity
prayer and live in anticipation of the next minute, hour, or year; however, now
I pray in gratitude for the now, for the awesomeness of living in Ghana, and
the serenity that washes over me when I stay humble, present, and open. Thank you Lord for this change within me and
thank you for now.
this is so true! a slow, simple surrender to the Spirit & life's daily sacred surprises is sublime!
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