Wilbur struggles with his feelings for Templeton. After all, the rat doesn't do a whole lot to make himself likeable. He steals food and prowls the garbage dump. Templeton is a rat, and E. B. White didn't have a great fondness for rats. But White makes Templeton a hero. Wilbur knows that Charlotte would have ended up in Avery's bug collection if it hadn't been for Templeton's buried rotten goose egg. The little pig recognizes that the rat has been a blessing, and Wilbur gives thanks.
Sometimes it's hard to recognize blessings, especially if you're a natural pessimist, like me. Right now, I could complain that I'm tired, that I don't have enough money to pay for my daughter's braces, that I just received another shut-off notice from a utility company. I'm great at complaining, because modern society is geared toward making people feel inadequate. I'm not thin enough. My house isn't big enough. My car isn't new enough. I don't look like Brad Pitt or George Clooney.
Yet, blessings are all around me. I have a job. I work with good people. My kids are healthy. My car is in good shape. My house doesn't have mice. There's food in my refrigerator. I sometimes get to do things I love--read my poetry, play in a band, have friends over to talk about books. Eat an occasional brownie. So, I really am blessed. I have enough. Just enough.
My prayer focus this week is giving thanks, every day. Thanks for the good things and the bad things, because bad things (like rats) can sometimes be the catalyst of grace.
Repeat after Saint Marty: "I am blessed. I am blessed. I am blessed."
A blessing for a disease-carrying, filthy rodent. |
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