Archive for the ‘think about it’ Category
Puzzle Pieces
I’m sharing just a photo today. It’s a photo of the sunrise above the mountain just east of my home that I took last Wednesday, February 1.
When my girls woke to see the amazing red, pink, and purple sky that morning they hurried me outside to go see it with them. Luckily, I grabbed my camera as we walked out the door.
We were all three outside on our front lawn in just PJ’s and slippers on a winter morning. Neighbors were driving by on their way to work so I didn’t even change my camera settings, I just snapped a few pictures. But mostly we stood quietly and looked up into the sky.
Little did I know what a blessed sunrise it was. You’ve heard the old adage, “Red sky in the morn, sailor take warn.” Well just as this beautiful sunrise predicted, it brought a snowstorm that evening- one of few we’ve had this very dry season.
For my girls and me, this sunrise struck us deeply and we were filled with a sense of awe. As we admired the overwhelming beauty of it, I thought in my heart that surely it confirms that there is a God above. For who else but a divine creator could create such a sky?
I woke early this morning and I remembered last week’s sunrise and the snow storm it brought. Then I was struck by how our life is like a great puzzle. Things happen to us that we can’t make sense of at the time and it is like a piece of the puzzle. We can’t see the whole picture. Some pieces look like a beautiful sunrise that we take the time to really see. There are pieces that cause us anguish or pain and pieces that are joyful. Some pieces rock us to our very soul.
Often the pieces don’t make sense, they just lay there on the table, not connected and we can’t see how they can possibly fit into our life.
Then something happens and the pieces fit together. And suddenly we see a bigger picture. We understand.
My One Little Word – 2012
Happy New Year to you all!
This past week life has finally slowed down. My family and I have happily been doing a lot of nothing.
This heavenly break has given me the chance to think long and hard about my new One Little Word.
This is the fourth year I have chosen a One Little Word (inspired by Ali Edwards). Each year I am surprised by how my word seems to choose me.
This year was no exception. Once my word came to me, I couldn’t hold any other word in my head for very long.
WORK
My new word frankly scares me a little bit. Especially given how much I’ve enjoyed these past few lazy days. I’ve found myself thinking it would be nice if my word were something like PEACE or JOY or CALM or some other more reflective word. But to every thing there is a season.
Here are few ideas that I’ve been thinking about. Several months ago my Dad sent me a copy of his personal history that he’s been working on. This is an excerpt:
While I was in the 9th grade, I got a job at Al Hohman’s Florsheim Shoe Store shining shoes… I made $25-$35 each Saturday and during the summer I worked several days per week. This was fantastic money for a boy of 14 in those days. The minimum wage was less than $1 per hour. Sometimes, guys from my school would come in for a shoeshine. It was a little embarrassing but it was such good money! My mother would quote from my grandfather; “There is no shame in being poor, only in being lazy—no work is dishonorable as long as it’s honest work”.
When I read this passage it struck me and I’ve thought about it over the past few months. It makes me think about what work ethic I am teaching my own children. I want them to know that it’s OK if they are not the smartest or the most talented… those things are God given and out of our hands. What I want them to know is how to work hard and do their very best. I realized that if I want them to learn this value, I need to teach it by example.
This year as I focus on WORK I want to be able to say as many an old sampler says, “I done my best.”
Here are a few other ideas I’ve been thinking about:
This quote/poem from Lowell Bennion:
Learn to like what doesn’t cost much.
Learn to like reading, conversation, music.
Learn to like plain food, plain service, plain cooking.
Learn to like fields, trees, brooks, hiking, rowing, climbing hills.
Learn to like people, even though some of them may be different . . . different from you.
Learn to like to work and enjoy the satisfaction of doing your job as well as it can be done.
Learn to like the song of birds, the companionship of dogs.
Learn to like gardening, puttering around the house, and fixing things.
Learn to like the sunrise and sunset, the beating of rain on the roof and windows, and the gentle fall of snow on a winter day.
Learn to keep your wants simple and refuse to be controlled by the likes and dislikes of others.
-Lowell Bennion
These two quotes from Thomas Edison:
Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work.
Being busy does not always mean real work. The object of all work is production or accomplishment and to either of these ends there must be forethought, system, planning, intelligence, and honest purpose, as well as perspiration. Seeming to do is not doing.
I am particularly struck by the second quote since it’s exactly the wisdom I need.
Just like in the past years, I can’t wait to see what meaning my little word takes on for me. I hope I am up to the challenge of this year’s word.