Adjusting priorities
Maria Elena Rego RojasWe have all lived experiences of loss that paralyzes us. I remember that when I traded in my house to give my daughter an apartment, I was very depressed, so I had left behind a beautiful, spacious, private house, in which I had lived for more than 20 years. This fact upset me emotionally. It is a normal and human reaction, one of losses. It is a duel that you establish with yourself. Little by little, I understood that I could live without my spacious and beautiful house, because I chose to reason what had happened and take advantage of the change, discovering that I could be happy without what I felt so attached to.
Also when I underwent a total thyroidectomy with lymph node dissection, due to a diagnostic error in the biopsy, I felt that life had been too unfair to me and depression made its triumphant appearance. These losses can cause us to re-weigh our priorities. I do not mean that we should live without a good house, or that it is a pleasure to live without the thyroid gland. What I want to emphasize is that life did not end there. I just learned from these experiences. And I adjusted my actions so that life's bumps were less painful.