it
was a call from my university, a call that soured my mood.
apparently
i have a balance on my account.
i’m
one month away from finishing my bachelors and credential.
i
just have one more assignment and one more test to complete.
“i’ll
have to take care of it at the end of the month.” i assured the woman on the
line. i start panicking, picturing this debt coming back to bite me. what if i
can’t get my degree? what if i can’t pay for the test? what if i fail my
assignment? these thoughts zip through my mind while i raked through our online
bank account.
overwhelmed,
i click the x to close the window. now i’m thinking about the promise i made
the kids before i dropped them off that morning. i reminded them of our weekend
plans to see Wonder. i am totally giddy about this movie because Evan devoured the
book this past summer. i too, read a lot of it aloud and we all fell in love
with sweet August’s character. plus reading the book before the movie is pretty
much the coolest, most awesome feeling when you got your popcorn and you finally
plop down in your comfy theatre seat on the day of its release... eeek! it’s
like you’re somehow in on the secret.
so
as you can imagine, my heart sank when i realized i promised something i don’t
think i can deliver. we just don’t have the funds this month, nor the credit.
my schooling and unemployment pretty much raped us the past 2 years.
fear
and regret are my go-to emotions.
anxiety
wells in my chest and steals my joy again.
i
come home from work angry.
scowling,
actually, at my husband.
blame
is my other go-to.
a
convo about money ensues while i’m burning hamburger buns.
just
before we sit down to eat, i manage to blurt out,
“this
is not the life i planned!”
please
tell me wives, you… you’ve been there? sigh.
anyone?
the
next morning i feel ashamed.
i
feel like i spit in God’s face after all he’s done to provide for us.
after
all He’s done to redeem this family.
it’s
easy to be thankless.
on
the flipside, it takes work to have a thankful heart.
but
what is a thankful heart anyway?
i
get in these funks -- even though i know they’re wrong.
i
guess i will always struggle with my rebellious nature to some extent.
i
guess i constantly need to be reminded of what really matters. and that is
certainly not stuff, as most of us would agree. so then why the funks?
oh
i don’t know, gulp.
[PRIDE]
[PRIDE]
W.T.
Purkiser once stated, “it’s not what we say about our blessings, but how we use
them, that is the true measure of our thanksgiving.”
we
all know the difference between saying and doing, right?
so
hear me out, i can spout thanks like the best of ‘em. and most would agree that
is a good thing. no?
but
can i live out thanks in my heart day after day even if i feel deprived and/or
entitled?
the
answer is no.
consistent
genuine thanks requires so much more of me.
it
requires action.
but
mostly, it requires humility.
i
can almost guarantee my thanks is robotic if…
::
i want more and more stuff
::
i continue to complain and grumble about life
::
i compare myself or my kids or my hubby to the Jones’
::
i’m short with my kids
::
i act deserving
::
i put God on the back burner
::
i bicker about my husband
::
i’m lazy
expressing
thanks and appreciation and gratitude and all that good stuff is not just about
sharing with the world the happy feelings in my heart. that’s kinda like
entirely missing the point. wouldn’t you say?
no,
the core of a thankful heart is a deeply humble person.
and
i am not this.
which
is why i struggle.
which
is why i’m writing this.
to
reorient my heart.
because
here i am, again. sigh.
and
it’s nearly Thanksgiving.
so
am i just fooling myself when i say i’m thankful for…. fill-in-the-blank?
like
the verbs love and faith, to know it’s real, it must prove itself
with action.
but
i can’t do this kind of thanks on my own, in my own strength.
i
have to ask for God’s help and for an attitude that strives to respond to God’s
love.
you
see, it’s never about thanking God/the universe in exchange for a warm fuzzy
feeling,
or
because we should,
or
because He commands it,
no.
God
doesn’t want robots.
that
is religion and that is blasphemy to Him.
when
i can finally say “wow, this is amazing! thank you, God. how can i respond
to your love?” i have learned the posture of true thanks.
of
course. it starts with realizing how much God has given me by expressing my
thanks, but if i don’t respond with
action, my “thanks” is false, fake, phony baloney.
anyone
can talk the talk.
but
can i walk the walk?
in
my gratitude notebook i scribbled down the many things i have come to call
“gifts” (i.e. blessings):
- my precious husband
-
my healthy kiddos
-
freedom
-
our home
-
a car that gets us places
-
endless food aisles at the grocery store
-
time to write
-
my mom
-
answered prayers
-
my health
-
coffee
-
hot water
i’ll
spare you the rest.
aside
from simply expressing thanks, how can i give
thanks for those things, truly?
give being the action verb.
let’s
take endless food aisles at the grocery store. i wrote that down as a “gift” at
one point. now how do i show thanks for all the amazing foods we have immediate
access to?
saying
it, sure. "thank you, God."
but
with these too: stewardship. contentment. giving back.
these
three things truly validate thankful heart.
let
me explain with a non-example.
here’s
what a thankful heart is not:
off
to the grocery store i go…to get more…to be annoyed with every person there –
‘cause it’s crowded and they’re all in my way … to ignore the checker without
even so much as a smile… to leave my shopping cart there to bang into someone
else’s car… to drive away in a hurry not even realizing what a blessing it is
to walk into a store to get food, or anything
for that matter any time i want. oh but i wrote it down somewhere that i am so
very thankful for the endless aisles of food at the grocery store.
pause
for a minute with me and really figure this one out. i can say i’m thankful,
but is that really thankfulness? my actions are not in line with my words. if i
really appreciate the many varieties of foods at my fingertips, how will my
actions show it?
stewardship:
i would probably use what food i have first before purchasing more.
contentment:
i wouldn’t buy unnecessary items.
giving
back: i would try to put food in the mouths of those who don’t have it as readily.
i would treat the people at the store with kindness. i would help make their
job easier by putting my cart back and finally yeh, i would thank God for
living in a country that is so well off.
-
if i am thankful for my mom, i will value her by calling her, attempting
to see her more often, deepening our relationship.
-
if i am thankful for time to write, i will use it wisely – not frittering
it away on unproductivity or meaningless tasks.
-
if i am thankful for water i will use it sparingly, and give back to
those in need.
-
if i am thankful for my health, i will eat healthy and work out (ha!) --
be a good steward of my body. i will be content with what God gave me, and i
will give my body/mind over to use for God’s purposes.
counting
our blessings is a start, but beyond that i must define thanks with a humble
heart as a good steward of what i have been given, as a content receiver of
such grace-filled gifts, and as one who is generous, the way God is with me,
finding ways to give back.
i
can assure you i haven’t gotten any of this down yet. so good thing for grace! in
fact, these ideas have had time to marinate as they were written over 6 years ago
on my previous blog! and would you believe i still fight myself on behalf of real
thankfulness. surely it’s different this time. since i’m in a different place. but
the struggle is always birthed via my thoughts. it’s in my attachment to needing
a “normal” family with normal family routines. my feelings of depriving my
children from a movie. my entitled attitude about our finances.
what
i fail to see is, i am blessed.
why
am i blessed?
so
i can bless others.
that
is what the heart of thanksgiving is.
does
it ever make sense that we keep taking and still God keeps giving?
we
gotta learn how to respond, and not robotically with mere words.
but
genuinely with action.
because
in the end (thankful) actions speak louder than (thankful) words.
_________________________________________________________
Do you struggle with thankfulness at times, please say I'm not the only one?
What are you thankful for? And how can you show genuine thanks?
Leave a comment, say hello.

I love this look at thankfulness, and am thankful to you for pointing out the true meaning of the word! Keep it up!
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