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Home / Bay of Plenty Times

Luke Kirkness: Ticking off reasons to be grateful

Luke Kirkness
By Luke Kirkness
Sport Planning Editor·Bay of Plenty Times·
1 Jul, 2021 10:00 PM3 mins to read

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Appreciating the little things more has made life less stressful for me. Photo / 123RF

Appreciating the little things more has made life less stressful for me. Photo / 123RF

Opinion

The past eight days for me have been incredibly insightful.

Returning to work I'm refreshed and raring to go after a mid-winter holiday in Auckland … not quite the surf beach getaway I was hoping for but it did the job.

Before I headed away, I started to feel bogged down in my work, stressed and lost my spark for life. These feelings have washed away and here's why:

My week and a half off in the City of Sails was great, though it started off poorly with the Highlanders falling to the Blues in the Super Rugby transtasman final.

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The majority of my time thereafter was spent catching up with friends and family.

Throughout the break I drank too much, exercised too little and spent more money than I'd have hoped for — I've got gorse in my pockets until payday now.

What I learnt after my week and a half trip to Auckland was quite insightful. Photo / File
What I learnt after my week and a half trip to Auckland was quite insightful. Photo / File

And as I reflected on the week that was while driving back to the Bay of Plenty, it hit me: I'm damn lucky but struggle to appreciate just how fortunate I am.

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I don't fully appreciate the little things in my life that make it great. I don't think I'm the only one either.

Thinking about my Auckland trip, it didn't bother me how much I was spending or what it was on either. Not everyone has this luxury.

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In the past year, thousands of people across the region have lost their livelihoods due to the Covid-19 pandemic.

Just this week Kawerau's Tasman paper mill ground to a halt for the last time.

And if I needed constant reminders, I live in a low socio-economic suburb where you can find sadness of some form down just about every driveway.

Before I left for my holiday, I wasn't quite my happy-go-lucky and boisterous self and I'm not quite sure why — in the grand scheme of things I had no right to be.

I have an interesting job, live in a beautiful part of the country, am healthy and have a good work-life balance.

If I thought long enough, I could fill this entire column with a massive list of blessings.

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So why was I feeling so down in the dumps? I think it lies solely with not appreciating the little things. Since I've started doing that more, the world seems a little brighter.

My unique job is a major blessing of mine. No day is the same - here's me making scones in Pak'nSave Manukau in 2019. Photo / File
My unique job is a major blessing of mine. No day is the same - here's me making scones in Pak'nSave Manukau in 2019. Photo / File

Each morning since my eureka moment I've listed reasons to be thankful, checking my notes throughout the day to remind myself. It's been hugely beneficial.

These reasons could be a roof over my head, food to eat, a reliable car, warm clothes and so on. As I mentioned earlier, the list is probably endless.

When we feel hard done by the world, it's very easy to fall deeper into a hole of despair. In these moments, I'd urge you to think about the blessings in your life.

And don't underestimate the power of taking a holiday from work — even in winter — to reset and get the cogs moving again.

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