Showing posts with label grateful. Show all posts
Showing posts with label grateful. Show all posts

Monday, October 1, 2012

Grateful Mondays


5 things I'm grateful for today:

1.) My new bright pink birthday running kicks. Love. Them. 

2.) All things pumpkin.

3.) Another year of life and more time to grow. 

4.) Twitter. 

5.) The pure-hearted people I work with in the homeless ministry. (Rebecca and Steve, I'm talkin' bout you.:)) 


Did you know that the practice of gratitude makes you happier and healthier? It's by design. What are you grateful for today?


Give thanks to the LORD, for He is good; His love endures forever. ~ Psalm 107:1

Monday, September 17, 2012

Grateful Mondays


5 things I'm grateful for today:

1.) Time spent with my mother and grandmother last weekend  

2.) A roof over my head when it's raining

3.) Cooler weather 

4.) Cold Topo Chico in a glass bottle 

5.) Rediscovering The Great Gatsby. Oh to write like F. Scott Fitzgerald. 


Did you know that the practice of gratitude makes you happier and healthier? It's by design. What are you grateful for today?


Give thanks to the LORD, for He is good; His love endures forever. ~ Psalm 107:1

Monday, August 27, 2012

Grateful Mondays

(Source)


5 things I'm grateful for today:

1.) School supplies to buy  

2.) Open Houses to attend

3.) Lunches to make

4.) Laundry to do

5.) That my kids are still at home with me. There'll be a time when I will greatly miss their presence.  

Did you know that the practice of gratitude makes you happier and healthier? It's by design. What are you grateful for today?


Give thanks to the LORD, for He is good; His love endures forever. ~ Psalm 107:1

Monday, August 20, 2012

Grateful Mondays




5 things I'm grateful for today:

1.) The opportunity for my kids to get an education  


3.) Freedom of worship

4.) Lungs that work

5.) Sushi 

Did you know that the practice of gratitude makes you happier and healthier? It's by design. What are you grateful for today?


Give thanks to the LORD, for He is good; His love endures forever. ~ Psalm 107:1

Monday, August 13, 2012

Grateful Mondays



5 things I'm grateful for today:

1.) A fun anniversary weekend with my husband.  


3.) My washer and dryer.

4.) Darjeeling tea every morning.

5.) My family's health. 

Did you know that the practice of gratitude makes you happier and healthier? It's by design. What are you grateful for today?


Give thanks to the LORD, for He is good; His love endures forever. ~ Psalm 107:1

Thursday, August 9, 2012

This little book rocked my world

(source)
It's not revolutionary nor necessarily provocative. It doesn't challenge my brain or keep my lying in bed at night pondering its complexities. What it does do is soothe my weary soul.

It's my gratitude journal. At just the right time, I saw this book in a bookstore in Seattle. Immediately, I craved it. Of course I can create my own journal, and of course I can pray the same things verbally. But I didn't and I wasn't. I was in a dark place. For whatever reason, this book was to be my conduit to God.

So, I started this journal with my daughter in what was to be the most difficult time of my life. I might possibly still be there.  But I'm here to tell you: The regular practice of gratefulness has given me a force field against trouble that I've not heretofore experienced. I get down, I get depressed, I curl up in a fetal position every now and then; but darn if I don't get up quicker than before and still thank God for the good that is always there.

God is not only "good" when things go well for my circumstances (promotions! good grades! good bill of health!). God is good when my step-brother/mother-in-law/sister-in-law dies, when my marriage sputters, when my kids go awry, when my husband loses his job. God is good when I don't know up from down.

Choosing to practice gratefulness has made all the difference.

We must accept finite disappointment but never lose infinite hope.  ~ Martin Luther King Jr.



Wednesday, August 8, 2012

Grateful Mondays



5 things I'm grateful for today:

1.) My life-long friend, Susan.  

2.) Nutella mousse cake. 'Nuff said.

3.) Humble, inspiring athletes like Leo Manzano

4.) 23 years of marriage this Sunday.

5.) Insulated water bottles. :)

Did you know that the practice of gratitude makes you happier and healthier? It's by design. What are you grateful for today?


Give thanks to the LORD, for He is good; His love endures forever. ~ Psalm 107:1

Saturday, August 4, 2012

A Pep Talk to Myself

Got my third triathlon tomorrow. It's a 'super sprint'. Yeah, whatever. ;)  There's a 300m swim (in a pool, glory hallelujah!), 11 mile bike and 3 mile run.

I would happily, HAPPILY, move a couple of running miles or 100m of swimming over to the bike portion.  Now here's a perfect triathlon for me: 100m swim, 25 mile bike, 2 mile run. See? Perfection. No one else seems to see it that way. Hmmph.

I have to choose my triathlons based on the swim. When people ask, "What triathlon are you training for?" I answer, "The one with the shortest swim." But I'm getting better peeps, slowly but surely, I'm getting better. I only have to stop once now on my way down Barton Springs and once on my way back. It was not so long ago that I stopped three or four times each way. I think I can tread water for a full 15 seconds too without begging for Christ's second coming.

Most of my triathlon training energy has been spent on learning how to swim and overcoming my phobias anxiety in the open water. This means that my running, the thing I've done with the most consistency the last few years, has had to take a back seat (think: back seat of a Greyhound bus). Second to swimming has been learning how to bike with clips and gears and the "big ring" and "small ring" and all that sort of complicated stuff.  Complicated or not, if I knew how much I'd enjoy cycling, I'd have started a long time ago. Not that I'm so terribly speedy, but that's fun stuff. Heck, if I knew how much I'd enjoy all of triathlon training, I'd have started that a long time ago too.

I read an article about Phelps recently and in regards to the 4x200 relay, in which the American team won gold, he said, "It shows that hard work pays off." Okay, I'm a nobody learning how to swim, but he's darn right. So simple. So difficult. Whether it's for the Olympics or just a suburban mom learning how to swim, the same principle applies: consistent and persistent work will get results. Hard work is the "magic bullet" for which so many people quick answers.


It's easy to want to hop around to every boot camp, TZPQX workout and barre-pole-dance thingy hoping that I'll see instant results and sudden prowess in the water (and/or on the bike). Honestly, it can be frustrating to see people gliding up and down Barton Springs while I can't. I was sorta-kinda hoping I'd be further along by now. I have to remind myself that my best bet for getting better is to really stick with my goal -- and give it some time. Centimeter by centimeter, my swimming is improving. Mile by mile, my cycling is improving. 


Didja know that bronze medalists tend to be happier than silver medalists? I looked it up on a hunch after watching the Olympics, and lo and behold, it's been documented. Apparently, bronze medalists are just happy to have won a medal at all. They had to have worked their tail off, and they felt satisfied about their results. Still in the record books. Third in just the, you know... whole world. Wouldn't you be happy? I hope I would.
Viktoria Komova after winning silver (source)
Reese Hoffa after winning bronze (source)


You and I are probably not going to win a gold medal nor a triathlon (if you do, message me, because we need to be better friends ;)).  But I'd like to have the attitude of a bronze medalist tomorrow and in everything I do. (Not that I'm coming in third in the triathlon tomorrow. That would be plain silly.) I've done the math, and here's the equation:


 hard work  
+  grateful attitude 
=  a happy outcome 


Bronze medalists sleep better at night. I'm sure of it. On that note, I should go to bed soon. It's rise and shine at 4:45a.m.  :-)


No one has ever become poor by giving. ~ Anne Frank