Broken hearts do heal. But first they teach.
My family’s beloved English Spring Spaniel Shadow died this morning, and I am so, so sad.
And also aware of joy, for the joy she brought my entire family—five Shadow-smitten people who consistently reveled in her doggy-ness. She was our entertainment, our therapist, our walking-buddy, our fuzzy little companion.
Her most recent gift to me is the reminder that compassion is born not just of choice, but of staying present to the broken heart. I choose neither to wallow with obsessive thinking and what-ifs nor run away by indulging vices or shutting down emotionally.
“Just this,” one of my favorite Buddhist authors, Geri Larkin, would say. “Just this.” My 12-step buddies would say, “Right foot. Left foot. Breathe.”
I never want to be one of those people who can blow off the sorrow and sufferings of others. So, for today, I receive the gift of grief, let it open my heart, and revel in the miracles my higher power has given me—most especially my soft-as-velvet pal with the floppy ears and the big brown spaniel eyes.