Gratitude is, of course, the central theme of the Thanksgiving holiday tomorrow. Many of us make lists of what we are grateful for – our families, our health, the food on our tables. Gratitude for the blessings in our lives comes easily into our hearts.

But what about the things that we are not grateful for – not really, not if we’re completely honest with ourselves? What about chronic illness, or the painful loss of a job or relationship or financial abundance? What about the people we can’t stand, the annoying co-worker or demanding boss or inconsiderate neighbor? What about the experiences that we wish we hadn’t had, the tough circumstances we wish we could have avoided?

The greater challenge this holiday, perhaps, is summoning gratitude for what we don’t really want in our lives. And yet, the most difficult situations we attract often serve as our most diligent, persistent teachers. They are the lessons we did not pay attention to until they became impossible to ignore, the habits and patterns left unexamined until life knocked us over the head with its big stick. Often, they are the situations that gift us, painfully yet effectively, with our greatest growth and expansion.

In this season of gratitude, can we open our hearts to that for which we are not yet grateful? Can we be thankful for everything that we’ve attracted into our lives, knowing that everything has a purpose, even if that purpose remains yet to be revealed?

By opening our hearts in gratitude to ALL of our experiences, we practice self-acceptance, wholeness and integration of everything we’ve created and attracted so far. And that is indeed something to be grateful for! This is practicing radical gratitude – thanking ourselves unconditionally for the experience we have created, knowing that all is in our highest good.

Happy Thanksgiving!

Andrea

P.S. For those of you who are wondering – I am absolutely committed to taking a 24-hour break from my 30-day detox and cleansing program tomorrow!  Yes, there will even be pie …

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