Healthy Living

Tuesday, February 9, 2010

Finding peace: A September 11th meditation

When September 11th struck all of our lives eight years ago, we had no idea what would happen in the world, in our country, or in our own backyards the next day. While we were affixed to our televisions, dialing frantically to see if our friends and family on the East Coast were OK, holding our children tightly to our chests, we could not have predicted how that day would change the way we travel, view people from other cultures, prepare ourselves for more potential disasters.

But here we are. Some of us may still be grieving awful losses of September 11th -- some of us are mourning the passing of loved ones, others are dealing with the anxiety of having a family member in active duty, others feel the impact of living in a changed city, and others feel humbled, overwhelmed, afraid, contemplative, worried.

Some of us may also feel like the daily changes in our lives are a small price to pay for patriotism, survivorship, faith, or just carrying on.

What brings us all together on this day is that we lived through that day. That we can all define the ways our lives were before September 11, 2001 and how our lives are on the other side of all that sadness and horror.

How powerful is it then for us to unite today with all of our energy and attention focused on peace -- if only for a few moments?

Last year, we centered on all we are grateful for in remembrance of the day that took so much from so many people. This year, I hope that you will take several minutes to listen to the wise, centering words of Thich Nhat Hanh, a monk and author who was exiled from his homeland after being nominated for a Nobel Peace Prize by Dr. Martin Luther King.

This meditation is simple, beautiful, and calls on us all to work for peace in the world by first finding peace within ourselves.

He begins decisively and still, gently, "I believe strongly that a person who is not happy cannot work for peace."

I love this call to renew our commitment to releasing anger, appreciating our blessings, and savoring the happiness we have so that we can truly be, as Thich Nhat Hanh says, helpful to the world.

Simply follow this link and play the meditation by hitting the blue phrase "Click this link to begin."  Perhaps if we collectively listen, quiet our minds, sit in the stillness, and then harness our energies to be happier in our own small lives, we really can make a difference in a post-9/11 world.

Maybe this will be the change we remember more than filling quart bags with bottles at the airport, more than hearing we've been elevated to an orange alert, more than the other changes that mark the changed course of our country.


More to honor the day:


[photo credit: Getty Images]
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From the Community…

Comments 1-10 of 16
  • Nancy Roberts's Avatar
    Posted by Nancy Roberts Thu Sep 10, 2009 10:01pm PDT

    This is really nice; for some reason, this anniversary feels more poignant than the others..maybe because we have a new leader and finally a chance for change? Tried the meditation, and it is really calming.

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  • Habanero♥™'s Avatar
    Posted by Habanero♥™ Fri Sep 11, 2009 5:21am PDT

    I will meditate tomorrow. For today, I choose to feel every emotion and shed every tear I did 8 years ago. I never, ever want to stop feeling what I felt on that horrendous day.

    God Bless our wonderful country!

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  • Katie B's Avatar
    Posted by Katie B Fri Sep 11, 2009 6:32am PDT

    We should never forget Sept. 11th... we should never forget the sacrifics that were made on that morning exactly 8 years ago to the minute... We should never forget the unity that we as Americans came to... to work together for the good of the people.

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  • Katie B's Avatar
    Posted by Katie B Fri Sep 11, 2009 6:38am PDT

    A Prayer by Eleanor Roosevelt during WWII -

    Dear Lord,

    Lest I continue

    My complacent way,

    Help me to remember that somewhere,

    Somehow out there

    A man died for me today.

    As long as there be war,

    I then must

    Ask and answer

    Am I worth dying for?

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  • Holly's Avatar
    Posted by Holly Fri Sep 11, 2009 7:59am PDT

    I hope that the families that lost someone that day are coping okay.

    I continue to pray for all the troops epically my husband's unit that is about to deploy.

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  • FatFighterTV's Avatar
    Posted by FatFighterTV Fri Sep 11, 2009 8:44am PDT

    I don't think any of us will ever forget what we were doing on that horrific day eight years ago. That was a beautiful meditation - thank you for sharing it.

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  • JDPsmiley's Avatar
    Posted by JDPsmiley Fri Sep 11, 2009 12:19pm PDT

    Y'all remember those Tshirts that the Red Cross put out on the market that said "United We Stand"?

    I pulled it out of a drawer today and I'm wearing it as a notion of solidarity. Be a Patriot today. As it pains me to say it- Happy Patriot Day, everybody. Go love your neighbors, families, friends.

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