The State of Thanksgiving
For some reason, this entire week has felt like a window for breathing. On a national scale, perhaps that has something to do with its being the first holiday after a startlingly contentious election season. On the personal level, for me, it follows a couple of months of big plans, significant breakthroughs, and large steps; the long weekend also stands as a pause before I find out, early next week, just how desperate my financial situation is.
Such is life. Amid all of the worries and confusion, one thing for which we can certainly be thankful is the opportunity to stop, every now and then, and turn our minds to other things, coming back to the difficulties with a fresh perspective.
A special thanks, therefore, is due to those who fight back the madness that would pull our minds from all things greater. I speak of those who articulate sanity, from religious leaders to teachers to writers and thinkers. Of those who root our lives in emotional stability — family and friends. And of those who risk their own lives to beat back the vines of iniquity on our own streets and in foreign lands.
Thank you all. When the time for pause is over, we’ll strive to uphold our own role in the everyday effort of thanking God by making our world worthy of its birth and of the future for which we hope.
Thanks Giving
Thankful that my religion encourages prayer even when — especially when — it feels utterly useless. Thankful for all of those — from close family to distant members of our nation’s armed forces — who keep my hardships well above…
http://whatattitudeproblem.blogs.com/home/2004/11/an_especially_p.html
An especially poignant note from Justin Katz on The State of Thanksgiving:For some reason, this entire week has felt like a window for breathing… When the time for pause is over, we’ll strive to uphold our own role in the
The State of Thanksgiving
More info can be found on my page…
This is really very beautiful, so thank you for sharing your gift of writing so well.