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Aren't dandelions amazing?!? |
Can you be thankful without directing
your gratitude toward something or someone? I wonder this
Thanksgiving Sunday about feeling thankful, about expressing grateful
feelings without knowing exactly what or whom I ought to be thankful
to, a euphoria without knowledge of its source. I have
moments—sometimes days—like that.
Long ago now, I had an epiphany forced
upon me by circumstance, the revelation being that to thank God, or
Allah, or the Buddha specifically for my abundant food, for instance,
could hardly be consistent without its corollary, namely that the
deity that chose to grant me such good fortune also chose to let—or
cause—my neighbour to go hungry. The conundrum caused too much
stress to ancient theologians, I concluded, and so a second god, an
evil one, was invented so that a different deity could be blamed for
the ubiquity of evils and failures.
But whether the ancients were right or
wrong in their world view regarding good and evil, they did prepare
for us some remarkable insights. I'm intrigued by their thoughts on
Sabbath, for instance, a deliberate check on our tendency to overdo
practically every project that engages us: too much focus on
ourselves, too much property and stuff, obsessive preoccupations with
self-indulgences. The Sabbath is a stop sign that urges us to take
stock of our lives and reset if necessary.
Perhaps Thanksgiving is a Sabbath of
sorts, an acknowledgement that those things that keep us well-fed,
safe and content have been won with great effort by those who went
before us and by those that sweat and strain to build, to fix, to
plant, to harvest so that we might be warm, safe and satisfied. My
inclination this thanksgiving is to show the sincerest gratitude to
my family, to my neighbours, to farmer friends, even to the man who
always has a store of gasoline for me so I can drive thither and yon
and the corner grocer for blessing me with friendship, hard work, skills.
And, of course, I will in a faltering,
uncertain way give thanks for the miracle of this planet with its
beauty, its sustaining resources, its air, water, soil and oxygen
that deserve my gratitude with every breath I draw, with every apple
I eat, with every waking morning even though my pleasure in all of it
is brief and uncertain.
For certain, I did not make this
happen.
My thoughts of thanksgiving often
stray to the poetry of Gerard Manly Hopkins, whose verse sometimes
baffled my English students completely, but whose sounds and images
captivated the more one immersed oneself in them, studied
them.
Happy thanksgiving.
Pied Beauty
Gerard Manly Hopkins
Glory be to God for dappled things—
For skies of couple-colour as a brinded
cow;
For rose-moles all in stipple upon
trout that swim;
Fresh-firecoal, chestnut-falls;
finches' wings;
Landscape plotted and pieced—fold,
fallow, and plough;
And all trades, their gear and tackle
and trim.
All things counter, original, spare,
strange;
Whatever is fickle, freckled (who knows
how?)
With swift, slow; sweet, sour; adazzle,
dim;
He fathers-forth whose beauty is past
change:
Praise Him.
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