Showing posts with label gratitude. Show all posts
Showing posts with label gratitude. Show all posts

My Major Problem with a Mini Promo


As our family waits for The Hobbit to start, five words in a pre-movie advertisement turn me into a crazy person.


Five words make me spontaneously shout, “That’s not true!”

(Which makes my son try to shrink his 6’ frame and my daughter try to shush me.)

It’s not the advertiser’s fault that their fancy five word phrase catches me the wrong way today. They’re just doing their job: selling fun, risk, and hope.

But tears sting my eyes as I furiously text a note to self:

"For me, 'Normal can never be amazing' is a LIE."

Here's why:


A normal Christmas Day would have been amazing.


To have Mother bustling about the kitchen, correcting all my cooking mistakes and calling out, “Harvey, the volume!” when Mozart’s concerto booms too loud in the living room. To have one of her enormous fresh flower arrangements in the middle of the table so we could play to play our yearly game of try-to-talk-through-the-centerpiece.

Instead, I spent four hours cooking alone in Mother’s kitchen while she lay on the couch, only vaguely aware of my presence or identity. 


A normal Monday back-at-school next week would be amazing.

To have Pastor Jon welcome our students back from Christmas break with his warm hugs and just-for-you smile. To have him lead another class discussion about how what the Bible says applies to nitty-gritty everyday living.

Instead, we will be shock-walking from class to class on Monday, in the throes of raw grief, wondering what we will do without the man who has lived the heart of God’s grace in this place for two decades. 


That Daddy is alive and almost back to normal is amazing.

After a New Year’s Day hike took longer than expected, my father fell 50 feet down a ravine where he waited for hours in the freezing darkness until the rescue helicopter was able to airlift him to safety. 

Instead of reeling from a second loss in two days, we are celebrating that his sprained ankle and scalp lacerations are healing.


For me to agree that
  • normal isn’t great...
  • normal isn’t fantastic...
  • normal can never be amazing...

...would say nothing about “normal” but speak volumes about my own capacity 
  • to see greatness.
  • to feel the fantastic.
  • to be amazed.

But I vehemently disagree.

I shouted, “That’s not true!” in the theater, I’ve been rehearsing it in my heart ever since, and I’m pounding it out here for anyone who’s read this far.

Normal can never be amazing” is a lie.

  • After almost 22 years of parenting, I know that one “normal” conversation between my strong-willed daughter and her stubborn-as-a-mule mom (which would be me) is so amazing that it deserves a holiday or postage stamp or fireworks or all three.
  • After a high-risk pregnancy and pre-term delivery, I know that a “normal” birth is mind-bogglingly amazing, and every time (okay, almost every time) my 6’ tall “preemie” annoys me I remember the incubator and am astonished anew.
  • After 25 years of marriage, I know that one more “normal” day together is a startlingly amazing gift to be treasured as if it’s our last...because it just might be. 

Part way through The Hobbit, Gandalf says, “Saruman believes it is only great power that can hold evil in check, but that is not what I have found. I have found it is the small everyday deeds of ordinary folk that keep the darkness at bay. Small acts of kindness and love.”

With this, I whole-heartedly agree.

And I re-commit to intentionally cherish -- by choosing amazement amidst the “normal” -- the people and life I am so lavishly blessed to call mine.


Your Turn:
  • What's your response to "normal can never be amazing"?  (Please feel more than free to disagree with me!)
  • When I invited Facebook friends to agree or disagree with "normal can never be amazing," a whole discussion of definitions ensued. How do you define "normal"?  "amazing"?
  • Anything else on your heart!




Coming in January!
Click here to Sign up to receive Cheri's FREE eBook when it releases!
This Really Got Me Link-up at Rethinking My Thinking

Day 26: THANKSGIVING (5 Ideas for Daily Thanks-Living)

Each day during The PURSE-onality Challenge: "A Holiday-Ready Heart" in October, Untangling Christmas by Karen Ehman and LeAnn Rice, will be our give-away prize!  

Enter via the Rafflecopter at the end of the blog post or click here to enter!



Day 14: TRUST (+ How Each PURSE-onality Can Get Day Overwhelmed)
Day 15: PATIENT (+ Practicing Now for Patience Then)
Day 16: NO RECORD (+ How to Have Grudge-Free Holidays)
Day 17: TRUTH (Each PURSE-onality's Take on Truth)
Day 18: PERSEVERE (+2 Cures for Procrastination)
Day 19: BLESS (Your Feelings Can Help You Choose)
Day 20: BUILDING (20+ Ways to Build with Words)
Day 21: HOLD (Hold Back, Let Go, and Step Up)
Day 22: FRUIT (I Didn't Think...I Was a People-Pleaser!)
Day 23: CLEANSE (A Holiday-Ready Home)
Day 24: REJOICE (We Share the Same Heart Rate) 
Day 25: NEAR ("Everything Else" or Emmanuel?)


Do not be anxious about anything, but in every
situation, by prayer and petition, with
thanksgiving, present your request to God.
Philippians 4:6 (NIV) 

The Typical Two

I've heard of two primary ways to focus on thankfulness.



1)  Keep track of what I'm thankful for (i.e. in a gratitude journal)

2)  Share my gratitude with those for whom I'm thankful (i.e. by writing a thank-you note)


A New (for Me) #3

But yesterday, I discovered a new way (new for me, at least!) to focus on thankfulness.

In preparation for today's blog post, I asked this question throughout the day:  

"What's one thing you're thankful for right now?"

I was happily overwhelmed by the sheer number of responses I got.

And I marveled at the diversity, the depth, the humor, and the honesty of each answer.

I kept thinking, “Me, too!” or “Oh, yeah!” or “I’d forgotten!” or “That’s so true.”

Every person’s expression of gratitude triggered thankfulness in me. 


What If...

I started wondering: 

What might happen if "What's one thing you're thankful for right now?" became my favorite conversation starter?

I don’t have an answer for you yet. 

(But I will!)

In the meantime, here are five ideas for daily “Thanks-Living,” the first being to do what I did yesterday: ask others what they’re thankful for. 

Try it! 

Then come on back and tell us what you learned about them, yourself, and gratitude!




1.  Ask other people, "What's one thing you're thankful for right now?"


  



2.  Thankful Thanksgiving Activity Countdown


http://pinterest.com/pin/56576539038414142/


3.  Gratitude Journal


http://pinterest.com/pin/56576539038414135/


4.  Perpetual Gratitude Calendar


http://pinterest.com/pin/56576539038414128/


5.  Gratitude Jar


http://pinterest.com/pin/56576539038414134/




Your Turn:
  • What hands-on project(s) have you done as a physical reminder to be thankful?
  • What's one thing you're thankful for right now? 
  • Anything else on your heart!

a Rafflecopter giveaway

What "Headlines" Lead Our Lives?


It's Warm-Up Week for October's PURSE-onality Challenge: "A Holiday-Ready Heart"!  Here's a handy checklist to make sure you're all ready. (And if you're a blogger, grab the button on the right, let me know you've added it to your site, and I'll add you to my blogroll!)

This week's give-away is for The Best Christmas Pageant Ever. (It's a Gregory Family tradition to have Daniel read this aloud to us every Christmas Eve...and for him to choke up at the end!)  3 names will be drawn -- enter via the Rafflecopter at the end of the blog post or click here to enter!

* * * * * 
(Can't view the vlog? Click here to see it directly via YouTube!  No time to watch? Scroll down to read the blog!)


Today’s title question comes from me getting stuck while trying to read through John 11.

The first place I got stuck was at verse 16. All my life, the one word I’ve associated with the disciple Thomas is “doubting.”  

But here, after all the other disciples have urged Jesus not to go where people are planning to kill him, Thomas says to them, “Let us also go, that we may die with him.”

Putting this into a headline, I’ve always thought of Thomas as a rather negative one:


THOMAS DOUBTS

Somehow I’ve missed this headline, which reveals some amazing courage:

THOMAS OFFERS TO DIE

I got stuck again in verses 36 and 37. Jesus sees Mary mourning, and he begins to weep. Verse 36 tells us, “Then the Jews said, “See how he loved him!” but verse 37 gives a very different perspective: “But some of them said, Could not he who opened th eyes of the blind man have kept this man from dying?”

Two vastly different headlines:

JESUS’ POWER IN QUESTION: 
Why No Miracle This Time?

or

JESUS’ LOVE TOO STRONG FOR WORDS: He Weeps With Mourners

So back to the question: What headlines lead our lives? 

Especially when both versions are true. We have a choice.

I’m working on memorizing Colossians 3:15-17. You’ll notice a common thread connecting all three verses:  thankful, gratitude, giving thanks

Now this is in total opposition to what happens in modern media. You’ve probably heard the phrase “if it bleeds it leads.” And if we buy into that philosophy, then our holiday headlines might read:

STORES CROWDED WITH RUDE SHOPPERS

or

FAMILY BUDGET STRETCHED BEYOND CAPACITY

or


COMMERCIALIZATION DESTROYS TRUE MEANING OF CHRISTMAS

Each of these will likely be true.

I’m also trying to memorize Colossians 2:6-7, and I love the last phrase:  overflowing with thankfulness


So back to the question: What headlines lead our lives? 

During October, I’m going to focus on leading with thanks-giving, well before the holidays hit. Because I know that whatever habits I have before the holidays are the habits that will stay with me–and even get magnified–during the Christmas season.

So here are a few thanks-giving headlines leading my life right now:

CAT WITH BROKEN LEG FULLY RECOVERS

Our little cat Dusty dislocated a leg bone in June, and for a couple of months, we didn’t know if she would recover. We feared she’d end up lame. But since the cast came off, she’s been as good as new, able to leap to the top of the fence and chase the dog to her heart’s content!

I’m trying to be intentional, each time I see one of our three cats, to let a headline of thanks-giving lead my life. To pause to be in awe of God’s creative, re-creative, and restorative power in Dusty’s lie...and especially in mine!


TEACHER COMPLETES MASTERS DEGREE

I almost didn’t share this one for two reasons. First, it sounds like I’m bragging. No idea how to handle that. Second, I was really embarrassed that it took me so long: 7 years! So when people congratulated me, I shrugged it off by saying, “FINALLY...it was about time!” 

But then I realized that we do this with our positive headlines. We downplay them, negate them, or don’t even share them. In my case, God has blessed me so much in the last couple of years with important insights and key people who have helped me finish my degree, I need a headline of thanks to lead my life! I praise God that I am done!


COUPLE CELEBRATES 24th WEDDING ANNIVERSARY

On September 11, Daniel and I started our silver year of marriage. It’s all by God’s grace that we’re still together; we have opposite PURSE-onalities, and we’re both pretty high-maintenance people. When I see him in the morning and in the evening, I’m reminded to have a headline of thanks-giving lead my life.


So back, once more, to the question: What headlines lead our lives? 

And more specifically: What headlines lead my holidays?

That’s the question I’m going to be asking myself as I wear (and switch!) my “A Holiday-Ready Heart” bracelet in October. 

Yes, I’ll aim to avoid complaining, criticizing, gossipping, and using sarcasm just like in May. 

But now I realize that those are just outward manifestations of the “headline” that is currently leading my life.

And the more I practice leading with thanks-giving, the more “holiday ready” my heart will become!

a Rafflecopter giveaway