Gratitude is not a
passive response to something we have been given, gratitude arises from paying
attention, from being awake in the presence of everything that lives within and
without us…Thanksgiving happens when our sense of presence meets all other
presences.
~ David Whyte
I’m writing this blog while sitting in the waiting area of a
small locally owned auto service center. My laptop computer is connected to the
Internet via the hotspot on my phone.
It’s only 8:00 am but already hot outside so the air conditioner in the
window and the fan in the corner of the room are keeping the room cool. The coffee pot on the table in another
corner fills the room with familiar morning aromas. The service tech asks me what kind oil to use and I don’t
have a clue. He quickly adds that it’s no problem he’ll look up the recommended
type online.
Sun streams through the window at a low morning angle as it
continues to wake up our part of the world, including tens and hundreds of
thousands of commuters who have filled streets and highways with their radios
on and are learning of more violent death in an airport on the other side of
the world. Somewhere others are
learning that people they know and love are among the dead and injured. My
thoughts drift to those closest to me and my heart sings with joy, anticipating
being with them to celebrate love and marriage this coming weekend.
Sitting alone with my thoughts I feel as if the whole world
is with me. Connected by the sun
of a new day, power grids, world-wide webs of data, physical senses, streets,
highways, flyways, oceans, radio waves, human pain and suffering, and human joy
and love – I am truly grateful in this moment!
The quote above comes from one of the best statements on
Gratitude and Thanksgiving that I’ve encountered. Please take time to read it.
Then take moment to pay attention to the gratitude all around us.
Thanks, Andy.
ReplyDeleteMy well-worn phrase that I say to myself (or out loud) to capture such presence, no matter the circumstance, is "It don't get better than this!" It might fit particularly nicely in your auto shop waiting room.
Diane