Wishing you serenity in the new year
God grant me the serenity
To accept the things I cannot change,
Courage to change the things I can,
And wisdom to know the difference.
When I first heard it, the words barely registered.
It was at an anniversary celebration for Pathways, the alcohol and substance use treatment center where I served on the board for many years.
The Serenity Prayer was stamped on a plastic token given to guests as they left the ceremony. Mine lay in the back of a desk drawer for years, lost among card holders, key chains, magnets and other detritus collected over years of managing – and attending – such events.
When Pathways opened, Jacob was a toddler. Never did I imagine that one day he would be a patient there, let alone show signs of addiction before his junior year in high school
There were signs I failed or refused to see, until I no longer could.
Years of madness followed. I tried everything to “cure” my son. There were contracts I made him sign and counseling I forced him to attend,
But I couldn’t control his addiction.
At my first Al-Anon meeting, the small gathering of men and women began by saying the Serenity Prayer. Their eyes closed, they intoned the same words that had been printed on that long-lost token.
Now, the words resonated.
Repeating the Serenity Prayer at meetings and in stark moments desperate to do something – anything – to change Jacob’s life, I soon realized the only person I could change was myself.
In this new year, when our family will celebrate 11 years of Jacob’s sobriety, I will pray for the wisdom to know what I can and cannot change….
… and be grateful for the peace it brings.
4 Replies to “Wishing you serenity in the new year”
Love this! Thanks for the reminder.
Thanks Sherrie We all need reminding!
Lisa
Beautiful and inspiring. Thank you, Lisa.
Mary thank you. Best to you and your men for 2023!
Love
Lisa