Be a Stream, Not a Swamp
2015-10-01
I invite myself to grow my sense of abundance in these ways…
- Remind myself to bless other people, even if it’s only by saying “I like your laugh,” or “It’s good to see you this morning.” Blessing can be asking a question about the other person’s life or family, and then listening with full attention to the answer.
- Serve people, especially people I don’t know. Make some food for them, serve at a soup kitchen, lobby for legislation that will make soup kitchens less necessary, learn the names of the children in my congregation.
- My spirit deepens into abundance when I practice gratitude. For the food I eat, for the beauty around me, for conversations and encouragement, for the things on my body that still work well, for hot water that comes right out of a tap in the wall, for family and love, for a car that runs, for the chickens in the yard, for the congregation I serve, for the feel of wind and water. For the bravery I see every day, for kindness and unexpected good, I am grateful. When I remember to be.
- I grow spiritually by giving, even when I don’t have that much stored up. One writer, Victor M. Parachin, put it this way:
[quote style=”boxed”]Be a stream, not a swamp. Remember, it is the mountain stream that carries fresh, life-giving water because it flows out. However, the swamp is stagnant. A swamp collects and retains water that comes its way. Don’t be the kind of person who seeks to accumulate much before allowing a little to flow through.[/quote]
When I own things I don’t use—clothes, furniture, even books—spiritual teachers will say that those things don’t belong to me. I need to let them go find their rightful owners.
When I lose track of a sense of “enough-ness,” it becomes a sickness of the spirit, and I start feeling stagnant, anxious and swampy. I heal my spirit by finding abundance in what is already there, and by keeping it flowing like a stream.