A Gratitude Journal
I am thankful
That in the midst of all these millions of atoms and molecules of this almost infinite universe I somehow managed to emerge out of nothing into the consciousness that am I
That I was blessed and fortunate enough to be birthed to two almost perfect parents who made me feel like me
That I had a younger brother who I could and would beat up almost daily until one day I discovered that I could no longer do so
That I was blessed with a baby sister who taught me how to love and who loved to sing with me and who was the only one of the several female human persons in my life who could ever stand my whistling
I am thankful
For the stars I have come to know and love and admire even if I seldom see many of them now
For my eyesight even and especially as it begins to fail me now
For my hearing
For all the music I have known throughout my days and for all of it I have yet to discover
For my senses of smell and taste
For my mother’s pasta, which we knew as pasta before it was fashionable to call spaghetti pasta
For wine
For hamburgers and hot dogs which I no longer eat now that I’m a vegetarian
For America
For money
For my mind
For being born into a bilingual family
For the boys who belittled and attacked me for being of Italian descent who showed me that not everyone is always nice
For Queens, New York in the fifties
For sandlot baseball and an actual one-pump gas station
For the pristine woods of Western Long Island where we moved with a horse farm and real hemp rope we would swing on
For sterno stoves and cigarettes stolen from our parents which we smoked in the woods and which mad us sick but not sick enough to take up the habit several years later
For teachers who taught us how to think critically, ask questions we could never get answers for, and gave us answers to those we could
For the Church, for the pre-Vatican II Church, with its sacred Latin liturgy where I would first encounter an abiding sense of mystery
For my father who told me to get a job one week after I turned twelve. So I got a paper route and for the next two-and-a-half years turned over every cent of the seven or so dollars I earned to my mother
For the hungry years
For my best friend Richie who I still know today
For my paper route customers
For their generosity and appreciation
For the pride I took in my work
For my bulldog Reggie who was strong and gentle at once
For birds in the sky
For the music they make at evensong
For all the insects I so feared as a child and so reverence as an adult
For all the menial and seemingly meaningless jobs I had to engage in as a young adult on the way to becoming me
For my work as a mason-tender on construction, where I learned lessons that feed me even today
I am thankful.
For my varied and even checkered career as a teacher that I was never content to stay put in and because of that I taught and learned many things
For the abused and neglected children I met in the South Bronx, who showed me how lucky I was to be born into the family I was born into and how not everybody was born as fortunate as I
That for ten years I had to supplement my income as a short order cook and counterman after school when I learned humiliation, humility, and how to crack an egg with one hand
For my wife Lorraine
For her steady hand and eager heart
For her love
For her awful cancer, which brought me back to God
For my beautiful son David
For his beautiful son Joseph, my grandson
For my daughter-in-law, Carrie, who makes my son happy
For my strength and endurance after Lorraine’s death
For the good fortune of meeting my second wife, RoseMarie
For her generosity in becoming a second mother to my son
For my beautiful wife Abby
For her patience in becoming second mother to my daughter Margo
That the sky is blue
For the seasons of the year, especially the spring and the fall
For the fierceness of winter, which reminds me that this life is passing, even as I approach the winter of my life
For my many abilities, used and unused, realized and unrealized, and the many gifts the Creator of the Universe has seen fit to bestow upon me
I am thankful
That I am not rich in worldly possessions, though I often think that I would love to be wealthy, yet I know that I am truly blessed for not being so
For my legs and feet, which have borne the brunt of my body for these long seven decades, and though tiring, still work
For the sun which never tires of warming this beautiful green planet
For the night which brings rest and mystery to us all
For the great diversity of beings and life on the earth.
For the multitude of peoples, and languages and cultures, for their oneness all
For my faith in a Creator God greater than me, a faith that I have lost and found too numerous times to count throughout my existence
For my doubt in the transcendence of our existence which persists in me even to this very day and for the certain knowledge that I may never know, but maybe I will
For the thought of my own death, that occurs at least once a day every day
For my certain belief that despite the seeming chaos of the world’s situation we as a species are surely being turned toward the Good
I am thankful
For my mind that can think these thoughts
For the brave ones who have gone before me
For those artists and writers, inheritors and begetters of a great tradition, who labored without the comforts of modern life to bring forth their masterpieces
For the explorers who pushed out into the depths and forged a new life for all of us
For the Founding Fathers of the United States, believers in God all, who produced the document that should always guide us, the Constitution of the United States
For the freedom to state all these things, which none of us should ever take for granted
For my life, which is surely a free grace of a gracious and good God.
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2 comments
Thank you for bravely sharing your life with us. I like the style you used. Is this called blank verse? You've beautifully tied all events together in a short prompt!
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Hello John, I'm grateful for the prompt that prompted you to write this eloquent, evocative and inspiring celebration of the virtue of gratitude. I lived in Queens in fifties and those years up until the age of 11 are among my happiest memories. I particularly admire your expression of the knowledge of gratitude articulated by references to the blessings of life experiences personified by the people you have known - love, family, work, nature, challenges, tragedies, nature, art, hope and faith, courage.
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