Keeping things simple
The speaker I am about to scribe has a message for me from Steve Jobs.

Simplicity. It’s one of the lessons he gleaned from his friend. Jobs once said, “Simple can be harder than complex.” I find that to be true as I am wandering the grounds of the conference center outside Dallas, looking for something to photograph. The challenge is always to find a way to cut the clutter – not just find a blossom among the cacti, but how to frame it to reveal its glory. Or bright blossoms in the reeds.
As I think about how to hone in on the core
elements around me, I realize I have a powerful tool at my disposal: thankfulness.
Thankfulness sharpens the senses and focuses the mind on the thing being
framed by gratitude. The more granular
we get in our thanks, the more uncluttered our moments become.
Not a general, thank you Lord for giving me food to
eat. But a specific, thank you for this soup and its hot, savory
sweetness. (Celery root and brie: amazing!)
It even holds true for
scenes without a single visual focus. Thank you for the early sunlight on these
delicate grasses and the way they seem to move joyfully in their stillness.
This is the challenge before us every day. Thankfulness requires a slower pace and an eye for detail, as well as a
bubbling pleasure in the goodness of God, who “gives generously to all
without reproach.” (James 1:5)
Paul called for us to “give
thanks in all circumstances.” (1 Thess. 5:18)
There’s a recipe for a simple life, laid out in black and white.
We do thank you, God. Through your Spirit, train our hearts and
minds to respond gratefully to your kindness to us throughout each day. Make it the lens through which we see our
lives, one blessing at a time.
Comments
Post a Comment