The other day I had a "moment". This "moment" was a moment of sadness. A wallowing of sorts. Lonely and dejected.
I was having my own inner pity party, and I was also reflecting on some recent Facebook news that a friend from years back had committed suicide, leaving his wife and young son behind. I thought about how sad he must have been to have the beliefs that Mormon's have about life after death and suicide, and I thought about how selfish it seems to leave your wife and child to pick up such broken pieces. I thought about how he seemingly didn't 'reach out' for anyone-- carrying all his inner hurt with himself. I can't imagine what was that so terrible to commit such a desperate act.
So, I moped around my sister's home, trying to find something to do whist in my funk. And, hoping to be carried away in some Rinkle-Forn imaginary village, I picked up a Dr. Seuss book I had never read.
Maybe, like me, you haven't read this book before. So, although it's a bit longer than some of his regular classic stories, you can 'read it here". The pictures tell the story better than the words alone, but the main message is there!
Because, especially on this Remembrance Day, we sure need to remember that, as Canadians and Americans, British and Australians... we have been VERY fortunate to have the freedoms we possess. Because, I guarantee you, there is someone out there today who does not, and they are FAR worse off than any pity party we create for ourselves!
DID I EVER TELL YOU HOW LUCKY YOU ARE?
-by Dr. Seuss
When I was quite young
and quite small for my size,
I met an old man in the Desert of Drize.
And he sang me a song I will never forget.
At least, well, I haven't forgotten it yet.
He sat in a terribly, prickly place.
But he sang with a sunny sweet smile on his face:
When you think things are bad,
when you feel sour and blue,
when you start to get mad...
you should do what I do!
Just tell yourself, Duckie,
you're really quite lucky!
Some people are much more...
oh, ever so much more...
oh, muchly, much-much more
unlucky than you!
Be glad you don't work on the Bunglebung Bridge
that they're building across Boober Bay at Bumm Ridge.
It's a troublesome world. All the people who're in it
are troubled with troubles almost every minute.
You ought to be thankful, a whole heaping lot,
for the places and people you're lucky you're not!
Just suppose, for example,
you lived in Ga-Zayt
and got caught in that traffic
on Zayt Highway Eight!
Or suppose,
just for instance,
you lived in Ga-Zair
with your bedroom up here
and your bathroom up there!
Suppose, just suppose, you were poor Herbie Hart,
who has taken his Throm-dim-bu-lator apart!
He NEVER will get it together, I'm sure.
He never will know if the Gick or the Goor
fits into the Skrux or the Snux or the Snoor.
Yes, Duckie, you're lucky you're not Herbie Hart
who has taken his Throm-dim-bu-lator apart.
Think they work you too hard...?
Think of poor Ali Sard!
He has to mow grass in his uncle's back yard
and it's quick-growing grass
and it grows and he mows it.
The faster he mows it, the faster he grows it.
And all that his stingy old uncle will pay
for his shoving that mower around in that hay
is the piffulous pay of two Dooklas a day.
And Ali can't LIVE on such piffulous pay!
SO...
He has to paint flagpoles
on Sundays in Grooz.
How lucky you are
you don't live in HIS shoes!
And poor Mr. Bix!
Every morning at six,
poor Mr. Bix has his Borfin to fix!
It doesn't seem fair. It just doesn't seem right,
but his Borfin just seems to go shlump every night.
It shlumps in a heap, sadly needing repair.
Bix figures it's due to the local night air.
It takes him all day to un-shlump it.
And then...
the night air comes back
and it shlumps once again.
So don't YOU feel blue. Don't get down in the dumps.
You're lucky you don't have a Borfin that shlumps.
And, while we are at it, consider the Schlottz,
the Crumple-horn, Web-footed, Green-bearded Schlottz,
whose tail is entailed with un-solvable knots.
If HE isn't muchly
more worse off than y9u,
I'll eat my umbrella.
That's just what I'll do.
And you're lucky, indeed, you don't ride on a camel.
To ride on a camel, you sit on a wamel.
A wamel, you know, is a sort of a saddle
held on by a button that's known as a faddle.
And, boy! If your old wamel-faddle gets loose,
I'm telling you, Duckie, you're gone like a goose.
And poor Mr. Potter,
T-crosser,
I-dotter.
He has to cross t-s
and he has to dot i's
in an I-and-T factory
out in Van Nuys!
Oh, the jobs people work at!
Out west, near Hawtch-Hawtch,
there's a Hawtch-Hawtcher Bee-Watcher.
His job is to watch...
is to keep both his eyes on the lazy town bee.
A bee that is watched will work harder, you see.
Well...he watched and he watched.
But, in spite of his watch,
that bee didn't work any harder. Not mawtch.
So then somebody said,
"Our old bee-watching man
just isn't bee-watching as hard as he can.
He ought to be watched by ANOTHER Hawtch-Hawtcher!
The thing that we need
is a Bee-watcher-watcher!"
Well....
The Bee-Watcher-Watcher watched the Bee-Watcher.
He didn't watch well. So another Hawtch-Hawtcher
has to come in as a Watch-Watcher-Watcher!
And today all the Hawtchers who live in Hawtch-Hawtch
are watching on Watch-Watcher-Watchering-Watch,
Watch-Watching the Watcher who's watching that bee.
YOU'RE not a Hawtch-Watcher. you're lucky, you see!
And how fortunate YOU'RE not Professor de Breeze
who has spent the past thirty-two years, if you please,
trying to teach Irish ducks how to read Jivvanese.
And think of the
poor puffing Poogle-Horn Players,
who have to parade
down the Poogle-Horn Stairs
every morning to wake up
the Prince of Poo-Boken.
It's awful how often
their poogles get broken!
And, oh! Just suppose
you were poor Harry Haddow.
Try as he will.
he can't make any shadow!
He thinks that, perhaps, something's wrong with his Gizz.
And I think that, by golly, there probably is.
And the Brothers Ba-zoo.
The poor Brothers Ba-zoo!
Suppose YOUR hair grew
like THEIRS happened to do!
You think YOU'RE unlucky...?
I'm telling you, Duckie,
some people are muchly,
oh, ever so muchly,
muchly more-more-more unlucky than you!
And suppose that you lived in that forest in France,
where the average young person just hasn't a chance
to escape from the perilous pants-eating-plants!
But YOUR pants are safe! You're a fortunate guy.
And you ought to be shouting, "How lucky am I!"
And, speaking of plants,
you should be greatly glad-ish
you're not Farmer Falkenberg's
seventeenth radish.
And you're so, SO lucky
you're not Gucky Gown,
who lives by himself
ninety miles out of town,
in the Ruins of Ronk.
Ronk is rather run-down.
And you're so, so, SO lucky
you're not a left sock,
left behind by mistake
in the Kaverns of Krock!
Thank goodness for all of the things you are not!
Thank goodness you're not something someone forgot,
and left all alone in a some punkerish place
like a rusty tin coat hanger hanging in space.
That's why I say, "Duckie!
Don't grumble! Don't stew!
Some critters are much-much,
of, ever so-much-much,
so muchly much-much-more unlucky than you!"
6 comments:
I love Dr. Seuss. I have been having the same thoughts as you, why??
No one will know I guess
very sad.
I lost one of my closest friend's to suicide almost two years ago. She left behind a husband and two boys. It is still rough to think that I saw her at church less than a week before. It is hard to balance our beliefs about life and death and suicide when we don't know what was really going on inside that person;s head. I feel your pain and know what is to come. You never get to know why, but you learn to go on. It does get easier.
Good luck!
I am SO sorry.
This takes me back to the day I found out that the father of the little boy I had just barely picked up to take to Cub Scouts with my little guys, shot himself. He couldn't handle any of the "regular" stuff that life brings anymore. He left behind some VERY confused little children. 9 to be exact. And a wife to deal with all the emotional problems that followed for years later.
It still is pretty hard somedays to think about it. I can't imagine what must of been going on in his head. Such confusion.
Thanks for the Dr. Suess Story. That's one I've never heard of before. It's really a good one. Thanks.
Thanks for posting this Debbie...
I have been dealing with someone hands on that struggles with this thoughts and its not easy.
I had never read this Dr. Suess before and I shared it with him.
I think Ill print it out and frame it and everytime hes thoughts go a stray Ill make him read it.
HUGS
Oh my gosh, that is just awful. Suicide is such a hard thing to deal with. It affects so many people and inflicts pain and guilt on others. I'm glad you found comfort in Dr. Seuss!
Does leave questions, doesn't it. My personal experience told me that people who are deeply depressed, and suicidal, are unable to see anything positive. There is no light at the end of the tunnel. There is no day in the future that offers anything for them. They are unable to see anything improving and believe there is no other way out; there is absolutely no way to fix anything. It's complete desparation. It's believing they don't have value and their existence doesn't matter.
Anyways for people like us who have the ability to see tomorrow as a new day, to see potential, possibility- we just cannot relate to the suicidal or deeply depressed. And we want to "fix them" when they feel they can't be fixed, aren't worthy of being fixed, there's no point to being fixed. So therein lies the yin yang of it all.
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