On my phone I get this free app called "Inspire Me" I read it daily. Sometimes it is cool, sometimes it is not cool. I found this one from last December that I emailed to myself, and it makes sense for this time of year...............
Today's Quotation:
At Christmastime, children play an essential part
in our celebrations. So much of what we do is intended to please
them--and all the while our hearts keep hearkening back to the Christmas
memories of our own childhoods. On Christmas Eve, sometimes we can't
help but envy our children the stars in their eyes, especially when our
own eyes are dull with exhaustion. Christmas is so much simpler for a
child. Can we open our tired, adult eyes to that same simplicity?
Ellen Sanna
Today's Meditation:
Almost everyone that I know complicates
Christmas a great deal. They buy too many gifts, or worse, they feel
obligated to buy too many gifts because of what they perceive as other
people's expectations and potential disappointment. They dread the
family get-togethers and don't want to go to them, but they rarely say
no. They spend more money than they have and then suffer for that for
months afterwards. It's quite sad that we don't allow ourselves simply
to sit back and enjoy the Christmas season. A lot of the stress that we
feel during the season is based on expectations, especially those of the
children that we don't want to disappoint. Many kids have developed
grandiose expectations of gifts to be gotten, and they know how to put
the pressure on their parents if they feel that there's the slightest
possibility of getting what they want. But trying to meet other
people's expectations is rarely a recipe for happiness. Christmas
should be a great opportunity for us to show people who we are in our
generosity, not a chance to show them that they can manipulate us with
their expectations. Simplifying Christmas is very important if we ever
want to feel the true joy of the holiday. Christmas is about peace and
the joy we can share with others, and there are plenty of ways that we
can share those things without getting caught up in the decorating
contests and the buying frenzies and the manipulations. In our family,
we realized early on that Christmas should be simple, and the simpler we
keep it, the more we're able to give during the rest of the year, also.
Remember, pleasing children isn't a question of giving in to all their
whims and wants. Pleasing them also has to do with teaching them the
true importance of holidays such as Christmas, about the reverence and
the peace and the joy we're meant to share. They can help us to realize
this joy if we can just learn about the wonder and the magic from them,
and combine that knowledge with our own knowledge of the significance
of the more important aspects of the holiday season.
Questions to consider:
Do you find Christmas to be a stressful
time or a peaceful, reverent time? Why? What kinds of things can we
learn from children during the holidays? Why does simpler tend to be
better in almost everything?
For further thought:
Christmas is not a time nor a
season, but a state of mind. To cherish peace and goodwill, to be
plenteous in mercy, is to have the real spirit of Christmas. Calvin
Coolidge
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