Thanksgiving Thoughts
Thursday, November 26th, 2009I could not let this day come and go without expressing a few thoughts on thanksgiving.
I meet with a few men each Thursday morning for breakfast and some prayer time. Our waitress is a Jehovah’s Witness. When we mentioned that we wouldn’t be there the following Thanksgiving Thursday, she commented that she would be working, but that she didn’t celebrate Thanksgiving anyway. Answering my “why,” she said that we are supposed to be thankful everyday, and we don’t need a holiday to be thankful. I thought about that later and agreed with her in principle. However, I think it does us good to come together as a nation once a year for the specific purpose of remembering our collective blessings. Reality is we don’t do that every day. We need this special day set aside to remember and give thanks.
Like most holidays, we incur a lot of distractions on Thanksgiving that interfere with our meditation on what the day is for. We could spend all day perusing the bulk of shopping ads for Black Friday and working on our shopping list. We are drawn to the TV for the Macy’s parade, football, and movie specials. Some will spend most of the day in the kitchen preparing that sumptuous meal. Others will rake leaves, go hunting, or put up the Christmas tree. None of these things is bad behavior. We just need to reserve some quality time to contemplate what we are thankful for over the past year.
This being a blog of cancer treatment emphasis, I would encourage you to think about the tremendous blessing of good health. Even if you are experiencing health problems, the fact that you have some of the best health care in the world is something to be thankful for. Yes, I say this with the full knowledge of the health care reform debate. Thank God for our families, our friends, our freedoms, our military men and women, and our riches. If you don’t think you are rich, just consider that, since you are reading this on a computer or smart phone, you are probably in the top 5% of the wealthiest people of the world. Even if you are considered at the poverty level of income by American standards, you are wealthy by the standards of most of the world.
So, set aside at least a few moments today to just concentrate on all of the pleasant and beautiful aspects of your life. Thank God for His provisions. Thank Him for those who have sacrificed to make our happiness possible. May you have a super Thanksgiving.