Cam Taylor

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Accepting Hardships as the Pathway to Peace

The above title is a line in the full length Serenity Prayer. On first glance, you shake your head and say, “How can this be?” But as you dig deeper, you begin to see how true this can be and the hope buried in these words.

acceptance

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.

Living one day at a time;
Enjoying one moment at a time;
Accepting hardships as the pathway to peace…
[continued below]

These words breathe hope since true hope is “an expectation with a pathway to achieve it.” The expectation is no matter how hard it gets, peace is always possible. The pathway to get there is by accepting our hardships.

I didn’t say “having hardship.” Simply having hardship is no guarantee you’ll have peace. Accepting hardships however, puts you on the pathway where you’ll find inner peace.

The natural tendency is to look in all the wrong places for peace.

  • Solve your problems – find peace
  • Eliminate hardship – find peace
  • Lower your anxiety – find peace
  • Reduce your stressors – find peace
  • Gain control – find peace
  • Manage difficult people – find peace

In each case, they depend on our circumstances getting better.

On the contrary, peace is an inside job and the by-product of an attitude you embrace – a choice you make not based on circumstances. True peace, as the Hebrew word shalom suggests, is a wholeness of soul, a soundness in your inner world, or a well ordered life under God’s direction.

When we look for peace in outside circumstances…

  • We solve our problems but more problems come.
  • We try to eliminate hardship and soon realize it’s an unrealistic expectation.
  • We reduce today’s anxiety but wake up tomorrow with new worries.
  • We experience loss and feel robbed of the life we had.

Acceptance is“the act of taking or receiving something offered.”

There’s a dance we step with when finding acceptance – especially when going through loss and grief. If our grief and loss is too fresh, we aren’t able to embrace final acceptance as described in the grief cycle but we can find inner peace while we travel the grief road.

Grief drives men into habits of serious reflection,
sharpens the understanding,
and softens the heart
(John Adams).

My losses (mobility, health, work, an active lifestyle) aren’t over. Another major surgery is coming. With it looming, I keep bumping into emotions like anxiety, depression, frustration, fear and each time I’m doing my best to accept these hardships as the pathway to peace.

The pathway to peace (by the way) can be more like climbing the Grouse Grind (very steep and hard on the body) verses a paved pathway by an ocean shore!

To be honest, I’m in the middle of accepting my hardships but have peace fairly frequently.

Here are a few structures I’m using to find peace’s pathway:

  • Get quiet – the other day I drove to a quiet spot by the side of the road and sat there for a couple of hours with my journal, my prayers, my thoughts. Peace came as I accepted life as it was right then.
  • A gratitude rock – I heard of an idea to reduce anxiety. Find a small rock, carry it around with you and every time you touch it, express your gratitude for what you’re experiencing in that moment. We’re not told to be thankful FOR all circumstances, just IN all circumstances!
  • Adjust expectations –I’ve been recalibrating my expectations to be more in line with my limitations and current reality. It’s a practical way for me to accept my hardships instead of trying to outrun them.
  • Share life with friends – I ran into an old coffee shop friend this week I hadn’t seen since before the accident. I shared my story, heard his story and in that exchange found myself accepting my hardships and experiencing peace in my soul.
  • Change what I can change – I’ve been reading the serenity prayer over several times a day – it’s helping me to work on those things I can change, leave those I can’t change alone and finding peace in the process.

Accepting hardships as the pathway to peace is not simple or easy but it’s possible if you commit to the journey. I’m a work in progress. You’re a work in progress. But I believe true hope and inner peace is possible even when faced with hardship in this life!

What keeps you from accepting your hardships?
What’s next for you to find acceptance?

Serenity prayer continued:

Taking, as He did, this sinful world
as it is, not as I would have it;
Trusting that He will make all things right
if I surrender to His Will;
That I may be reasonably happy in this life
and supremely happy with Him
Forever in the next. Amen.
(by Reinhold Niebuhr)

About Cam Taylor

Coach, author, speaker, father, friend, leader, life long learner.

12 Replies

  1. Suzanne

    Thank you. Reading this article several times over, as I have puzzled over this phrase

  2. Debbie

    Thank you for this information it holds the TRUTH of God’s promise to all of us in a way that I was unable to see on my own. Blessings

  3. Mike Mason

    Great post – so helpful right now. Someone said that in our troubles we find true gold – and it is so right

  4. Andrew Stringer

    Cam, thanks for your insights. Hope you are doing well now. This is deeply meaningful to me. Praise God for leading me to find it at just the time it was needed. God bless!

    1. Thanks Andrew for your comment. I’m so glad you found the words meaningful and helpful for your journey. May you find joy and strength for your journey. Cam

  5. Hello Cam, thank you for writing this. I have given my entire life to Jesus Christ and attend Catholic Mass on Mondays, Tuesday, Wednesday, and either Saturday evening or Sunday morning. I am given my entire life to God. I am in the process of writing a book. Maybe you would like to contribute to and together we could try and get it published. I am a recovering alcohol/addict who has suffered with the disease since 13 years old. I have had many slips. I rely on my Faith, Hope and Love and step 3 and 11 to stay sober daily. I have two surgeries coming up. One is going to be on my left carotid artery and the other one is on my lower lumber since I have spinal stenosis. I am 65 years old and operate my own business selling air pollution control catalysts and systems. I am also going through a very difficult time at the moment financially. I have to keeping giving things to Jesus. I don’t know of any other way of handling the difficulties and staying on an even keel.

  6. Inner peace comes from casting all of our care on the Lord and being anxious for nothing (see 1Peter 5:5-7 and Philippians 4:6-7). Our care includes what we are suffering. I don’t know if accepting hardship as a pathway to peace is the same thing.

    1. Thanks Peter for your comment. I do believe casting your care goes hand in hand with acceptance of hardship. It’s hard to “cast off” what you haven’t accepted but remain bitter about receiving.

      1. Stephen Rose

        So the choice to keep the care would be hardship

  7. Charles Petersik

    I stumbled across this article while researching the term “pathways to peace”. I’m writing about my life long battle with drug addiction and thought this would be a great title…because it stood out to me recently, when I read the long version of Reinhold’s masterpeice.
    It may very well be what has allowed me to finally embrace myself entirely…true acceptance. My healing has begun again at a much deeper level and at some point, I hope to get it all down so that my story might help others who find themselves on this path as well.
    The injustice: the unspeakable….has left scars that may never completely fade away, but as the soul begins to heal, the light coming in reflects back out, and suddenly, the injuries (hardships) become almost…insignificant. The pathway to peace is overwelming! Decades of loneliness and isolation have been replaced by a collective connection that words cannot describe….
    God bless…

    1. Thanks Charles for opening us up to your story – just a crack but enough to know how challenging your journey has been. May you find ongoing healing as you write your story. I certainly did. I’m not sure if you saw that I wrote a book called detour which maps out my journey of recovery from my accident. Keep me posted on your journey – to check out Detour – go to http://www.camtaylor.net/detour

  8. Diane

    Thank you for this article it was a timely gift

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