Tags
act, barriers, God, gratitude, incarnate, practice, stewardship, tangible, Thanksgiving

November is regularly a month when I talk about gratitude with my parish. Most of that push comes from the confluence of things that happen in November. We are almost always closing up our stewardship season in November – a season when we encourage parishioners to let their giving reflect their gratitude toward God. We are also preparing for the Thanksgiving holiday – which although a secular holiday comes pretty close to being a sacred time of thanksgiving and praise. And just yesterday we took the day to thank Veterans, honoring the sacrifices their vocations require and the blessings we enjoy because of their work.
This year, to help cultivate my own sense of gratitude, I picked up a calendar one of my favorite non-profits produced call “30 Days of Gratitude.” Though some of the “activities” are to think about something I am grateful for, like a good memory in my home, most of the “activities” are more hands-on – like expressing gratitude to every member of the household or greeting a neighbor. What I have loved about the calendar is the shift the calendar has created.
Often when we talk about gratitude, we feel burdened – like we’re supposed to force ourselves into an emotion. But what the calendar has done is make gratitude tangible – to act on my gratitude. What’s beautiful about that shift is that the action is something I can do that has the unintended consequence of feeling gratitude instead of trying to manufacture gratitude out of thin air. The calendar has made gratitude incarnate – allowed me to inhabit gratitude instead of simply emoting gratitude. It’s a subtle change, but one that feels much more freeing.
I wonder how you are navigating gratitude during this season. What are the barriers to you inhabiting gratitude? What burdens are clouding your gratitude practices, making you more cranky than grateful? Gratitude is not easy. If it were, folks wouldn’t be producing gratitude calendars and journals. I invite you to find the tool, the person, or the community who can help make your gratitude incarnate.

