Wilting flowers

Amor Fati

Around this time of year, we get countless encouragements to acknowledge all the things we are grateful for. And so we tend to think of all the goodness in our life – loving relationships, community, physical and mental health, financial abundance, fulfilling careers, passion projects, etc. – and give our thanks.

This is, of course, a wonderful and important practice.

But this year, through the hardship of divorce, parenting, and all the other struggles life has to offer, what feels more resonant for me is stopping to give thanks to all the “badness” in my life. I find that so many of the things I did not ask or wish for or that create difficulty in my life turn out to be some of my greatest gifts. They push me to grow in new ways. They open up doors of possibility that I couldn’t have imagined before.

My father’s death comes to mind. Of course, I miss him dearly. I wish he could meet my kids. I wish I could talk to him as the man I am today. I wish I could be sharing Thanksgiving dinner with him one more time.

And yet, his death has been among the most important stepping stones along my path. That loss and hardship have shaped me into the person I am today. They have instilled in me resilience and a much deeper appreciation of the preciousness of life.

This is something similar to the Stoic principle of “amor fati” – the love of your fate – and Nietzsche’s “eternal recurrence.” These principles ask us to truly embrace and treasure everything life has to throw at us – both the things we label as good and whatever we label as bad. We live our best lives when we actively choose the life we actually have, rather than yearning for some different, more “ideal” one.

So today, as you give thanks around the table, perhaps consider all the struggles, losses, and disappointments in your life. See if you can find a way to give thanks to them too, for offering grist for the mill and for the unexpected opportunities and gifts they will inevitably provide in time.

You might find that there’s not only a lot to be grateful for there, but that the simple act of appreciating and choosing the “badness” lightens its burden on you.


Recent posts

  • Wilting flowers

    Amor Fati

    We live our best lives when we actively choose the life we actually have, rather than yearning for some different, more “ideal” one.


  • Book with old photos

    Making the implicit explicit

    So much of personal growth is working to make implicit memories explicit. We revisit past repressed traumas so they don’t act on us unconsciously anymore. But social change work is often the same.


  • White / black polarity

    Positivity vs. negativity

    So many of us who want to do good in the world come from a paradigm of excess positivity. We go, go, go. We keep saying “yes” even when we don’t have the time, energy, or genuine desire to do so. We make ourselves unwell trying to do good in the world.


  • AC unit

    Humanity phases out all fluorinated gases

    The world achieves the universal phase-out of all F-gases, potent climate pollutants. This monumental effort, driven by the Montreal Protocol, averts up to 0.5°C of warming, creates a cleaner, safer, and economically beneficial global infrastructure, and confirms humanity’s ability to solve major environmental challenges.


  • 3D render of ecology friendly electric car

    All of the world’s nations outlaw the internal combustion engine

    Though much of the global population had already transitioned to electric vehicles, all the world’s governments now formally ban manufacturers from selling cars that run on fossil fuels, creating a historic milestone in the fight against climate change.



I help aspiring changemakers do good in the world and feel good in the process.


Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

More Great to Good posts


  • The myth of bigger impact

    The myth of bigger impact

    When we chase bigger impact, we often end up applying and reinforcing the current system's broken logic to social change. We end up recreating the…


  • The big lie of social change

    The big lie of social change

    One of the big lies among people who want to have a positive impact in the world is that to do good, we kind of…


  • If it doesn’t feel good, it doesn’t do good

    If it doesn’t feel good, it doesn’t do good

    One of the most persistent myths in the world of social change is that: to do good, you must feel bad. This is not only…