• Home
  • Making a Home
    • Farmhouse Diaries
    • Homemaking Notes
    • Frugal Accomplishments
    • In the Kitchen
    • Decluttering
  • The Farm
  • Goals
  • Books
    • The 20th Century in Literature Challenge
    • Reading the Alphabet Challenge
    • WILLA Literary Award Winners Challenge
    • The 10 Year Reading Plan for the Great Books of the Western World
    • Daily Spiritual Reading Challenge
  • Projects
    • Five Good Things
    • The Wednesday Five
    • Extraordinary Ordinary
    • One Hundred Beautiful Things
    • Small Biz Showcase
    • Snail Mail
  • Summer I.H. Program
  • Shop

The Big White Farmhouse

intentional living, little by little

October 29, 2015

{contentment} Step Eight: Show Gratitude

It seems fitting, with November on the horizon, to end this series with gratitude.  While I’m terribly inconsistent (why is that?!), I tend to be much more content in life when I take the time to count my blessings.


Don’t get me wrong.  Sometimes giving thanks is hard. 


In a pinch, I can quickly list off the easy ones: gorgeous sunsets, that first cup of coffee in the morning, the smiles of my children.  I’m thankful for the food in my fridge, checking off tasks on my to-do list, my husband’s laughter.  I praise God for the brilliant red leaves on our tree outside, a full night’s sleep, a homily that convicts me deeply.  But life isn’t all sunshine and roses, is it?  Life is hard.


When we discovered my son may have a learning disability, it was hard to give thanks.  
When my marriage was crumbling, it was hard to give thanks.
When I struggled with crushing anxiety and depression, it was hard to give thanks.
When people in my life let me down, when earnest prayers felt like they went unanswered, when I felt so alone, it was hard to give thanks.

But.


It’s in these moments, the moments that are so difficult and feel so impossible, that I must muscle my way toward gratitude.  Even when I can’t see the finish line, I trust that He does.


My son may have trouble reading, but dyslexia also means that he is a creative, out-of-the box thinker.     
My marriage almost ended a few years ago, but that trial by fire has reignited our love and commitment in a whole new way.
My postpartum hormones have brought me down dark and scary places, but have also forced me to learn about myself and how I work.
My disappointment and loneliness have brought me closer to Christ in a way I never have before.


Everything is a gift.

{via}

Related Posts...

Posted In: Uncategorized · Tagged: 31 days, contentment

About Me
Welcome to the Big White Farmhouse!

Less Materialism, More Intentional Living

Get the Big White Farmhouse In Your Inbox!

Loading

Currently Reading:

The 10 Year Reading Plan for the Great Books of the Western World

Popular Posts

No.866: Last Week at the Farmhouse // Do You Trust Me?

No.567: Homemaking Notes on a Monday // Vol.14

No.577: A List of October’s Frugal Accomplishments

No.237: 40 Days of Lenten Soups // Part Two

No.780: Last Week at the Farmhouse // Simple Autumn Days

THE BIG WHITE FARMHOUSE IS A FOR-PROFIT BLOG AND POSTS MAY CONTAIN AFFILIATE LINKS. ALL CONTENT ON THIS BLOG BELONGS TO ME. PLEASE DO NOT USE MY POSTS OR PHOTOGRAPHS WITHOUT WRITTEN PERMISSION.

© THE BIG WHITE FARMHOUSE 2011-2025.

Amazon Disclosure Policy

The Big White Farmhouse is a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for sites to earn advertising fees by advertising and linking to Amazon.com.

Less Materialism, More Intentional Living

Archives

Copyright © 2025 The Big White Farmhouse · Theme by 17th Avenue