A concept from Japanese culture reframes what seems like pure misfortune—the loss of a beloved engagement ring—into an act of invisible grace and protection.
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There’s a conversation that we had almost ten years ago on the Happier podcast, and listeners repeatedly bring it up to us—someone mentioned it to me just this week, in fact. So in case you’ve missed it, I wanted to talk about it here.
Way back in episode 78, in the “Listener Question” segment, Allison asked the following question:
I recently lost my engagement
So Allison had lost this ring, which was very precious to her, and her question was, “How can I recover from this loss?”
In episode 82, we shared a suggestion from the listener Yuri. It is this answer that has made such an impression on people.
Yuri wrote:
My friend who is a foreign correspondent used to have a solitary diamond ring she bought herself. She always wore the ring wherever her assignments took her for several, maybe ten, years.
One day she realized that she was missing her ring when she was reporting abroad. She was very sad because it had the sentimental value. She felt as if she had lost a war buddy. (Her assignments included many war torn countries and disaster areas in the world.) Then she thought…maybe the ring sacrificed itself in order to protect her from something bad.
In our culture, Japanese sometimes believe things can take your place in the event of a bad happening, such as an accident. It’s totally a myth, but it is not too difficult to think of losing thing that way for us. Maybe the listener who lost her wedding ring can think that her precious ring protected her from bad things. As Gretchen said, we can’t change what happened, but we can change how we regard that event.
It’s interesting to me that this idea has clearly made such a deep, memorable impression on listeners. This way of reframing a loss seems to hold great power.