Thanksgiving is now three days gone,
and many of us are gearing up for the busy Christmas season. What
better time to pause and reflect on the meaning of this just~past
holiday.
Gratitude. We know it as a core value
of all spiritual traditions. Most of us have also heard of the latest
research demonstrating its many benefits to physical and emotional
health. And yet, a living gratitude, one that infuses our day to day
lives, often eludes us. I wonder, could we find a fresh approach to
thankfulness that would serve us better?
For guidance, I turn to the Tarot.
I choose the round Motherpeace deck, co~created by
Vicki Noble and Karen Vogel. I sit on my cushion,
hold the cards for a few moments, and then begin moving them from hand
to hand in a gentle shuffle. I spread the cards face~down in an arc
in front of me, and move my left hand lightly over them, sensing the
card that draws me to it. And, in fact, one does seem a bit more
insistent than the others. I turn it over to find this image~~
I smile as an answer already begins to form. I
gaze at this woman soaking in a natural spring, healing water
bubbling from deep within the Earth itself. I see the rocks of
various shapes enclosing the pool, and the flowers floating on the
water's surface. I note the woman's face turning slightly upward,
eyes closed, as she welcomes the starlight streaming down.
Why has this card beckoned? What might
this image have to teach us about gratitude? I sense the answer in the woman's face. Fully receiving the gifts of healing water
and starlight, there is no doubt that gratitude radiates from her in
waves. She does not need to remember
to be thankful. It is not a technique practiced or something to be
checked off a to~do list. No, it flows easily and naturally from
gifts that have saturated her core.
Perhaps we've been going about this
gratitude thing all wrong. Maybe, just maybe, the trick is to
thoroughly receive the gifts in the first place, to let them root
deeply inside us. Then, gratitude will take care of itself. Like the
woman in The Star, if we open to the starlight and healing
waters of our lives~~no more gifts half~received on the fly, but ones
welcomed deeply into our cell tissue~~would not thankfulness happen
naturally?
And a thankful heart changes
everything~~how we perceive the world, the choices we make, our
reactions to the challenges that come our way. Living in appreciation
transforms, and our actions and our very presence more readily become gifts to others. Having been filled, we automatically give back.
And that's not all. As our hearts
become more open and responsive, our ingrained sense of separation
begins to diminish. Our discriminative minds distinguish between
giver and receiver. When receiving elicits a response that is of
benefit to others, those divisions begin to blur. Everything is
revealed as part of a grand flow. All is blessing, the receiving and
the giving, the breathing in and the breathing out.
And as we grow in this awareness, we
will no longer need a special day once a year to be thankful. Each
moment will be received~~and given back~~as sacrament.
Thankfully yours,
Leia Marie
For a webpage that details the benefits of gratitude backed up by research, click here.
7 comments:
I'm so thankful for you Leia,and your infinite wise words that touch me so deeply!
Love, Cindy
What a very sweet comment, Cindy! You just enacted the Star's essence, you know? The Star gave to me, I gave to you, you gave back to me, with both of our comments perhaps giving to someone else. And the Flow continues. Cool, huh?
I've been reading about thankfulness, it's that time of year. We should be thankful everyday - all day for the very gift of life. Then we can turn around and say I'm thankful for you - others - who have touched this very life of mine. It makes one feel good, I believe.
Blessings,
Well put! It seems the trick is in turning that "should be thankful" into an "Oh, my gosh, what a gift this is!" I think that's one of those things we're in these lives of ours to learn. So let's let those blessings flow, taking them in and sending them back out again. Thanks so much for reading and for writing!
Hi Leia,
Thank you for your insights, as usual.
I believe that every day is a Holy Day, or a holiday, but I understand why society observes only certain days as holidays (marketing is one of them, LOL).
Wouldn’t be great if every member of the human race celebrated Thanksgiving Day every day?
Meister Eckhart, a medieval theologian, philosopher and mystic, said that, ‘If the only prayer you ever say in your entire life is thank you, it will be enough’.
Again, thank YOU, Leia, for sharing your insights with the world!
Huh! I never got that holiday came from holy day, tho it seems obvious to me now. Thanks for that, Rocky! And the Meister Eckhart quote is one of my favorites, originally shared by an atheist, my dear husband. Perhaps that's a sentiment that can cross all those human~made divisions of belief, and be something we all can agree with. THAT'd be a reason for gratitude, a cause for a holyday! Thanks for reading and for writing, Rocky.
Thank you! :>)
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