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healthy coping mechanisms

Morning Bliss

July 3, 2025 by Emily Thiroux

I learned about Morning Bliss from singer, songwriter Karen Drucker, and I’m hooked. I am a journal writer and have written in my journal first thing in the morning before I do anything else for years, but this is more!

First, if you are not journaling, this is a great time to start. Here are a few things you can include. I start with gratitude always for having another day to experience.  Then write what’s on your heart. What concerns you today? What will you focus on?

Next, write your intention for the day starting with the words: “I am.” My intention for today is: “I am open, honest, and happy.” Remember that writing an intention is not writing a to-do list. Rather, it is a statement of who your really are. And you can change your intention every day.

Be sure to write at least three things you are grateful for. Be specific. Writing out your gratitude reminds you of what is great about your life. I always follow gratitude with something that brought me joy from the day before. I love this daily reminder of the joy I get to experience every day.

Now, to get you started with a positive boost, write a letter to yourself and include who you really are. Then make a vow to yourself. In my letter I vowed to put myself first and to treat me the best from now on! You don’t need to write a letter every day, but do write one when you can use a boost!

When I finish writing, I do a little dance. This brings me energy. I pick an upbeat song and play it on my phone and dance along. Do all your favorite moves. I keep a set of hand weights in my bedroom so I can use them as I dance.  This wakes me up, gives me energy, and gets me started for the day.

Then do your morning routine of getting ready for the day with all the usual things. And consciously choose the clothes you will wear for the day to suit your mood. Then eat something healthy that will serve your energy.

Doing your Morning Bliss every day makes each day brighter! Enjoy!

 

 

The Grief and Happiness Alliance

Loving and Living Your Way Through Grief

My email is [email protected]

Let me know if you’d like to receive my newsletters which have lots of good things!

You can listen to my Grief and Happiness podcast here or anyplace you listen to podcasts.

You can join the Grief and Happiness Alliance Gatherings which meet weekly on Sundays by clicking here

You can order the International Best Selling The Grief and Happiness Handbook by clicking here.

You can order The Grief and Happiness Cards by clicking here.

You can order Loving and Living Your Way Through Grief by clicking here.

Filed Under: Change, Creativity, Gratitude, Grief, Happiness, Joy, Self-Care, Support, Writing Tagged With: Celebration, change, Gratitude, grief, grieving, happiness, healthy coping mechanisms, how to deal with grief, Joy, reclaiming your joy, self-care, support

Being Gentle With Yourself

June 27, 2025 by Emily Thiroux

Through the process of grief and the process of life, we often hold ourselves up to the highest standards and goals. While that can be admirable, we often put unrealistic expectations of how fast we will accomplish our desires causing us stress and feelings of defeat or being a failure. That does not serve you.

If this is you, take a deep breath in slowly, then blow it out your lips like through a straw. Do that again. Now don’t you feel better? Do that whenever stress or negativity starts to rise. Now wrap your arms around your shoulders and gently rock yourself a bit, and ask yourself, “What do I need right now?” Then listen to yourself. If you need to rest a moment, do that. If you need to do something different, do that. Whatever you choose to do, make it be gentle.

How is your day going right now? When it isn’t going the best way to serve you, change direction. If you are stressing about a big job, break it into smaller components so that it isn’t overwhelming. Finish one step before thinking about the next one. This process melts stress. Also, don’t hold yourself to an overly long to do list. Try making a list of your top three items to do.  Only when those tasks are complete, make another list of three.  Just three items can be done, so you will have constant moments of success.

Throughout your day, allow yourself to reflect on healing images like your favorite peaceful place, Let that be your background for the day and feel that peace as you move through your day.  And have positive music playing in the background like this song by Karen Drucker: Gentle With Myself.

Think about what means the most to you and do what is related to that. Often, we find ourselves doing things we don’t enjoy yet we do them out of habit. For instance, maybe you are in the habit of washing and drying and putting away a load of laundry every day. Try consolidating the laundry so that you do it only once or twice a week. That will save you so much time! What habits that you have can you release? Let them go and notice how much lighter you feel!

Do the same thing with stories you tell yourself. Do you say things to yourself like “I am always unhappy,” or “I never can get things done.” Would either of those statements serve you? Probably not. Then release them. What other habits do you have that are negative or that don’t serve you? When you identify something that doesn’t bring you joy or satisfaction, let it go.

As you reframe your life, your peace and happiness will increase. The more you release, the better you will feel.

 

The Grief and Happiness Alliance

Loving and Living Your Way Through Grief

My email is [email protected]

Let me know if you’d like to receive my newsletters which have lots of good things!

You can listen to my Grief and Happiness podcast here or anyplace you listen to podcasts.

You can join the Grief and Happiness Alliance Gatherings which meet weekly on Sundays by clicking here

You can order the International Best Selling The Grief and Happiness Handbook by clicking here.

You can order The Grief and Happiness Cards by clicking here.

You can order Loving and Living Your Way Through Grief by clicking here.

Filed Under: Change, Grief, Happiness, Loss, Love, Self-Care, Support Tagged With: change, grief, grieving, happiness, healthy coping mechanisms, love, practicing gratitude, reclaiming your joy, self-care

Hanging On

June 18, 2025 by Emily Thiroux

I admit it. I procrastinate. Do you? I have discovered the more time I procrastinate, the less time I have in my life to enjoy and really live. I keep a to-do list mostly because I think if I don’t write it down, I won’t remember to do it. However, the more I write on that list, the less likely I am to complete all the things I think I must do! And I am realizing as I have more to put on that list, the less I get done.

Do you do this? Writing the list or just keeping all you must do in mind is a thief of time, yet I haven’t been able to give up that list, yet. Now I am examining that list and wondering how everything on it got there. In this process, I see that I am hanging on to things that I don’t need to. One of the things that has taken up permanent residence on my list is to file. In early grief, I found the mail arriving every day was overwhelming, so I left it on a pile on my desk. The bigger the pile got, the heaver the burden of it became.

I realized that I had to address that pile. I sat with the pile and a trash can and tossed all that didn’t matter: advertisements, coupons, offers of things that did not concern me, and invitations to events I was not interested in. That got rid of about 80% of that pile. That eye opener made me wonder why I had been allowing that pile of mail to intimidate me. I resolved to sort my mail on the way from the house and dump all I do not need in the trash can outside before it even enters the house. Then I was easily able to deal with anything important, and the huge pile of mail ceased to exist.

Now when I look at my list, I no longer see the words mail and file on the list. In wondering why this had become such a big deal to me, I remembered that my husbands loved to pick up the mail and go through it each day. I miss them doing that. I miss the agreements we had to support each other by taking on the tasks we did. I missed seeing their names on the envelopes that arrived reminding me that we lived and loved in this home.  Keeping all that mail served no good purpose, and I have plenty of things that are constant reminders of them.  Releasing felt good.

I’ve continued examining my list, and it gets shorter as I see no reason to hang on to things that don’t serve me. Now I am able to eliminate the clutter in my home and my life as I no longer keep his favorite food on hand that I am never going to eat. I no longer watch sports on tv that I used to watch with him because he enjoyed it so much. I still feel his presence and love, I still enjoy my memories. And I have opened so much space in order to live my best life now enjoying every moment along the way.

What can you release?

 

The Grief and Happiness Alliance

Loving and Living Your Way Through Grief

My email is [email protected]

Let me know if you’d like to receive my newsletters which have lots of good things!

You can listen to my Grief and Happiness podcast here or anyplace you listen to podcasts.

You can join the Grief and Happiness Alliance Gatherings which meet weekly on Sundays by clicking here

You can order the International Best Selling The Grief and Happiness Handbook by clicking here.

You can order The Grief and Happiness Cards by clicking here.

You can order Loving and Living Your Way Through Grief by clicking here.

Filed Under: Change, Fear, Grief, Loss, Self-Care, Support Tagged With: change, Fear, Forgiveness, grief, grieving, healthy coping mechanisms, losing a loved one, self-care, support

Caring for Yourself

June 13, 2025 by Emily Thiroux

You have probably discovered by now that grief isn’t something you get over. When someone you love dies, that love stays with you at least for the rest of your life. And that is good. I often hear people say that they lost a loved one, but they aren’t lost. Their essence remains in your heart as long as it is beating.

Try this. When you are missing your loved one, find someplace quiet to sit. I love to sit outside in nature with the fragrance of the flowers and the whisper of the breeze on my cheek. Close your eyes. Put both hands on your heart and take in a slow deep breath, then blow it out though your mouth like you are blowing through a straw. Breathing this way gives you a re-set. Mary Morrissy taught me that breathing technique. It’s a quick way to feel at peace. I do it often. You can too.

While you are enjoying this peaceful experience, allow your thoughts to drift to beautiful times you shared with your loved one. Where were you? What were you saying. What were you doing. How did you feel? Paint a picture in your mind of what you were experiencing at the time. You can create this experience any time you want to and allow it to bring you comfort.

When you notice someone you care about is struggling with grief, invite them to come sit with you quietly. You may choose to share with them the process I described, or you can just listen to their thoughts, or just sit in silence. Just being with someone grieving can be the greatest gift to them. And it can bring peace to you also.

 

The Grief and Happiness Alliance

Loving and Living Your Way Through Grief

My email is [email protected]

Let me know if you’d like to receive my newsletters which have lots of good things!

You can listen to my Grief and Happiness podcast here or anyplace you listen to podcasts.

You can join the Grief and Happiness Alliance Gatherings which meet weekly on Sundays by clicking here

You can order the International Best Selling The Grief and Happiness Handbook by clicking here.

You can order The Grief and Happiness Cards by clicking here.

You can order Loving and Living Your Way Through Grief by clicking here.

Filed Under: Change, Community, Grief, Loss, Self-Care, Support Tagged With: change, grief, grieving, healthy coping mechanisms, losing a loved one, self-care, support

What’s Good About Today?

June 5, 2025 by Emily Thiroux

I have heard so many people say that they don’t know how to live without the loved one they are grieving. I remember feeling that way too. And though the territory is unfamiliar, we find that we have no choice but to step into it once our loved ones die. The harder we fight moving forward, the more miserable we can become. I am sure that deep down you don’t want to be miserable, and I am pretty sure your loved one wouldn’t want that for you either.

I talked to the father of a young man who had just graduated from college and was ready to start his new life. Instead, his son was diagnosed with a terminal illness, and he didn’t have long to live. His devastated friends and family would come to visit him with tears in their eyes, and he would accept their loving wishes and then smile and ask them, “What’s good about today?” This would bring their conversation to the present, and they could enjoy the time they got to spend together. As the visitors left the hospital room, everyone was smiling.

Beautiful memories were created during those visits. Instead of heavy, sorrow filled memories, they could remember the smiles and laughter they shared the last time they spent with this special person. And the young man’s last memories were of smiling, happy people.

When dealing with your grief, try focusing on your loved one in a happy way. Try writing in your journal or visiting with a loved one. Share your memories. When did you see your loved one the happiest? When he was acting in a play? When you volunteered together to clean up the park? When you both went with your friends on a hike in the mountains?  When you watched him graduate or get an award? You will find yourself smiling as you reflect on these happy memories.

I’ll bet if he could send you a message right now, he’d say: “I love to see you smiling! Keep living your best life. What’s good about today?”

 

 

The Grief and Happiness Alliance

Loving and Living Your Way Through Grief

My email is [email protected]

Let me know if you’d like to receive my newsletters which have lots of good things!

You can listen to my Grief and Happiness podcast here or anyplace you listen to podcasts.

You can join the Grief and Happiness Alliance Gatherings which meet weekly on Sundays by clicking here

You can order the International Best Selling The Grief and Happiness Handbook by clicking here.

You can order The Grief and Happiness Cards by clicking here.

You can order Loving and Living Your Way Through Grief by clicking here.

Filed Under: Change, Community, Gratitude, Grief, Happiness, Self-Care, Support Tagged With: bereavement gifts, change, community, friends, Gratitude, grief, grieving, happiness, healthy coping mechanisms, how to deal with grief, Joy, reclaiming your joy, self-care, support

Reset

May 28, 2025 by Emily Thiroux

I have used a computer for many years, and there is one thing they all have in common. They don’t like to have too many things open at once, and since I do so much on my computer, I often don’t pay attention to this, and that’s a bad thing to do! I’ll be right in the middle of something important, as is everything I do on my computer, and suddenly it will decide it’s just too crowded and needs some space. When this happens, I have no choice but to shut it down and give it a little rest before I start it up again. Only when it does open, it demands that I close or fix lots of things before I can get back to what I really need to do.

Our bodies act in a similar way when a loved one dies, or we suffer a great loss. We can become physically overwhelmed and need to take a break. We rest. We sleep. We don’t notice what is going on around us. We forget to eat, or we eat too much of the wrong things mindlessly. We are challenged by having to make important decisions. We may crave peace and company at the same time. Basically, we are confused. And we do need to shut down, rest, and then restart fresh.

Now is the time to get a notebook divided into three sections, or maybe even get three notebooks, or set up Notes on your phone, or a spread sheet on your computer.  The most important thing is to write everything down. Don’t trust your poor brain to remember things.  It’s doing the best it can. And so are you.  Create three lists. One list is for things you have completed. Another for things you have yet to do. And the last list is for things you would love to do, especially for things you have been putting off.   Be sure to include dates and times where needed so things don’t slip through the cracks.  These lists will give your brain a break for a while longer.

The big thing to remember is that there is no rush. Tasks needing to be done can wait. Take care of yourself. Go for a walk. Have cup of tea. Listen to some music. Just rest, then reset.

 

 

Emily Thiroux Threatt

The Grief and Happiness Alliance

Loving and Living Your Way Through Grief

My email is [email protected]

Let me know if you’d like to receive my newsletters which have lots of good things!

You can listen to my Grief and Happiness podcast here or anyplace you listen to podcasts.

You can join the Grief and Happiness Alliance Gatherings which meet weekly on Sundays by clicking here

Filed Under: Change, Grief, pressure Tagged With: change, grief, grieving, healthy coping mechanisms, how to deal with grief, self-care, support

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