Have
you thanked Him?
Have
you praised Him?
Have
you made it your priority to agree and cooperate with Him today?
Have
you taken that deep breath and listened for what He has for you today?
1 Timothy 2:1 (The Message)
The first thing I want you to do is pray. Pray every way you know
how, for everyone you know.
My
wife Dr. Delaney shot this over to me yesterday via email with the subject
line, “thought you would like for DISPATCH" (OFH).
So,
at the good Doctor’s request, here is a little from her and Charlie Brown
today. I added the scripture references for good measure!
Over the Thanksgiving
holiday, I introduced my 3-year-old daughter Marty to the 1965 classic A
Charlie Brown Christmas, an animated feature that would never get greenlit in
today’s world of over-protective — and overly precious — parenting. The opening
lines of the film set the stage for what is one of the most poignant and
sophisticated messages geared toward youth I’ve ever seen. “I think there must
be something wrong with me, Linus,” Charlie Brown, who’s battling a whole host
of neuroses that could rival Woody Allen’s, says to his friend. “Christmas is
here but I'm not happy. I don't feel the way I'm supposed to feel. I just don't
understand Christmas, I guess. I like getting presents and sending Christmas
cards and decorating trees and all that, but I'm not happy. I always end up
feeling depressed.”
As the story unfolds,
we learn the source of Brown’s blues — an excess of holiday cheer driven by
consumerism and untethered to more substantial and enduring forms of meaning.
Although Brown eventually finds solace and significance in the Christian theology
underlying the national holiday, I spoke with a top social psychologist and
philosopher about how the quest for deeper meaning (however you define it) can
temper your holiday blues.
The root of Brown’s
sad state of mind may stem from the disconnect between how he feels and the
overwrought displays of joyfulness. Sonja Lyubomirsky, Ph.D., a professor of
psychology at the University of California, Riverside, who studies happiness,
acknowledges how overwhelming the cultural imperative to be happy can be: “The
emphasis on happiness can feel oppressive,” especially, she notes, during the
holidays. “The idea that we should all be happy all the time is ever present in
the United States,” she explains, but it reaches a crescendo this time of year,
when we’re expected to be as plump with cheer as Jolly Old St. Nick. “When you
feel like everyone else is happy and having a good time, the contrast is more
salient, more striking,” she says.
Paul Thagard, Ph.D.,
an eminent Canadian philosopher and author of The Brain and the Meaning of
Life, agrees, adding: “Pursuing happiness by itself, or cheer, is not a very
good strategy because it’s not clear what that is,” he says, pointing to a 2013
study that demonstrates the ephemeral nature of happiness compared to the more
enduring and satiating nature of meaning. “Meaningfulness...may involve
understanding one’s life beyond the here and now, integrating future and past,”
the paper reads, “In contrast, happiness, as a subjective feeling state, exists
essentially in the present moment.”
With that in mind,
Thagard and Lyubomirsky urge us not to get caught up in the gaudy theater of
holiday cheer and instead anchor ourselves in meaning, as Charlie Brown
eventually learns in the film. Try this 5-pronged approach:
Cultivate
deep connections (Proverbs 17:17)
Thagard advises us to
use the opportunity of festive get-togethers to have real heart-to-hearts with
family and friends: “The best thing people can do is to try to foster the
relationships they have in ways that reach deeper levels of connection,” he
says. Broach subjects — parenthood, relationships, life purpose, dreams,
defining memories — that forge deeper bonds that make you feel seen, understood
and known.
Give
thanks (1 Thessalonians 5:18)
“Express gratitude —
through an email, a phone call, in person — to someone in your life you’re
grateful for,” Lyubomirsky says. “Thinking about the things you take for
granted, as opposed to what you want and are not getting,” she adds, can help
build on your sense of meaning. To boot, a study came out earlier this year
showing that gratitude predicts hope and happiness.
Focus on
something outside yourself (Hebrews 13:16)
Part of Charlie
Brown’s trouble is that he’s stuck in an endless cycle of neurotic and
self-loathing thoughts. “It’s morally required and more psychologically desirable
when people stop thinking so much about themselves,” Thagard argues. Research
published in the Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin last year showed
self-centeredness has a reciprocal relationship with loneliness — which means
that learning how to get off the merry-go-round of self-obsession and see
beyond yourself has healing potential. “I think a lot of life’s problems are
due to too much self-focus or self-absorption,” Lyubomirsky says, “So anything
you can do to take the focus off yourself will be beneficial.”
Find
opportunities to help others (Deuteronomy 15:11)
One way to redirect
your attention is to seek out opportunities to help others. “Practice acts of
kindness,” Lyubomirsky suggests. For instance, “choose someone in your life
this week and do something to make them happier.” Thagard says that research
indicates people who serve others have a greater sense of meaning and purpose.
Studies have demonstrated the mental health benefits of volunteering, so pick
up some shifts at a soup kitchen or charity for children to feed your sense of
meaning.
Place
community above individuality (Philippians 2:3)
Sounds
good to me
Thanks Doc! 😊
---
I
love you all.
Have
a BLESSED DAY!!!
OPPORTUNITIES for HOPE
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