Full…
Is how I feel today.
My heart is full of the amazing blessings of the people in my life. Young, old, and in between. Friends who are like family—some I have known for years and some who are newer in my life.
My heart IS FULL.
But I don’t always FEEL full.
And usually that’s when I’m not paying attention.
Not paying attention to the good things in each day, no matter how small they may seem. The Bible says “every good and perfect gift comes down from the Father…”, (James 1:17) and He does give us so many incredibly wonderful gifts if we will have eyes to see and hearts to understand.
When I go for a walk along the canals
with my three favorite red-head boys,
I feel full.
When I get an unexpected card in the mail
from an out-of-state friend,
I feel full.
When I look out my window at work and see the sun in the bright blue sky and the hummingbird darting in and out amidst the blossoms of the bird of paradise bush,
I feel full.
When I think about the fact that I have gas in my car, food in my refrigerator, clean drinking water coming out of my faucet, clothes on my body, a bed to sleep in….
all these things make me feel full.
Paying attention.
That’s the key.
And remembering…
and recounting…
the many ways God touches us,
provides for us,
and speaks to us throughout each day…
It is then I feel full.
It is then I know what it is to BE FULL.
* * * * *
In Your presence is fullness of joy;
In Your right hand there are pleasures forever.
~Psalms 16:11
(ps. I could have come up with many more,
but I was being true to the 5min limit!)
With this post I am participating in Five Minute Friday over at The Gypsy Mama's blog. Today's writers were to write for five minutes (w/o tweaking, rewriting, or critiquing!) on the word: FULL.
Here's how it works: "On Fridays around these parts we like to write. Not for comments or traffic or anyone else’s agenda. But for pure love of the written word. For joy at the sound of syllables, sentences and paragraphs all strung together by the voice of the speaker. We love to just write without worrying if it’s just right or not. For five minutes flat."