Thank you. Thank you very much. Thanks, you’re so kind. We say it out loud and we write it in letters, on cards and in emails. There are so many means now through which we express gratitude. At this time of year, as a child, it was time to get out the Basildon Bond paper, blue with envelopes to match, and write the obligatory thank you letters. To be honest writing those letters was a chore. I got through the job under my mother’s watchful eye. Thank you Granny for the lovely present you sent me, I will make good use of it. And Dear Auntie Paddy, Thank you for the puzzle. I liked the horses. Not so long ago I was going through my grandmothers papers and came across all of my thank you notes to her. Preserved along with other letters from her family in a chocolate box with roses on top. Even my childish scrawled letters had enough meaning to be kept. Thank you Granny.
Adopting a default attitude of thankfulness might seem at first to be rather errr…old fashioned or false. After all gift receiving times like Christmas can be rife with disappointments for both children and adults alike. It can be hard to be grateful for something you didn’t want, can’t use, will never wear etc. However we used to say, It is the thought that counts and yes indeed it is if we are able to say that and actually mean it! The knitted rabbit and bear were Christmas presents for a small child. He might take to them, he might not. My monastic work colleague and I produced them, she knitted and I made them up. I’m thankful for the opportunity to help make and give gift. To help make these toys which have already given a lot of pleasure before ever they reached their target.
Expressing gratitude can become a habit. There is always, no matter what ones circumstances are, something to be grateful for. Perhaps life itself. Or as in this article gratitude for ones thumbs and fingers!
Thanks to Angie for the link to the article.
Love the rabbit & the bear!
They were/are for Iain Robinsons grandson. I’ve not heard how he responded to them. Hopefully he didn’t scream his head off.
You are so right Mugo (and the bear and rabbit are beautiful).
Hi Chrissy, Lovely to see you hear I must say. And glad you share my thoughts on gratitude. Hope you are not snowed in and that you are keeping warm, happy and accident free! The Bear and rabbit were fun. The bear ended up with a bow tie!
The toys are wonderful! One of my girls had a hand-made knitted lamb (going by the name of Lamb-y!) and he was treasured. I’m sure we still have him. There is a kind of life about hand-knitted toys which somehow communicates beyond their ‘toyness.’ I’m sure they will be treasured. Well done!
You are SO right Chris about knitted animals. Really strange in a certain kind a way. But I will not be doing more of them in a hurry…. But there was a cute mouse to knit…
Ok then. Will give the mouse a go. Happy knitting.