As I was being thankful this morning, I stop to think about how my old car made it from Central Texas, to Central Michigan and routed back through Western Illinois and into Kansas City without a hiccup, a burp or even a momentary bad attitude. The car is 23 years old and it ran like an Olympic athlete. I was impressed. Although I am aware that it’s a machine I still at times personify things and I thanked it several times. I gave it a few pats on the dash. I had the oil changed to celebrate, and wonder of wonders, I drove through a car wash. Now you know I was impressed. I’ve had the car for about two years and hadn’t washed it yet. I may make it a the regular event just to encourage its pistons.
Since I’m still in thankful mode, I began to thank God for my health. I have a lot of similarities to that old car. In the car the fan for the AC will only run on high. That’s OK because that’s the only way I want to run it. There are a few other things that are not quite up to factory original, but none of them affect the quality of the ride or the dependability. I can say the same thing about me. I am getting old. I wonder how old I am in car years? I have my aches and pains. I have ears that are on a downward spiral. There are times when even I am aware that my mind isn’t as sharp as it used to be. Even then it seems to be sharper than most of the people I run into on the street.
I had a great trip. I renewed connections with family. I saw friends. I had a lot of time for silent meditation driving through the farms and fields of America. I found my way home. I’m sure my wife had questions about the possibilities of that but my son has a tracking device on my phone so they could find me if I started wondering into New York City or some such nonsense.
Life is full of blessings.
homo unius libri
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May God continue to bless you!
ReplyDeleteI continue to ask, "Why me?" I find that in talking to others, I am not the only one who asks that. I am content with God's answer of, "Because I said so."
DeleteGrace and peace