Winter Gifts and Graces - Natalie Ogbourne

Of the practices I use to foster a hopeful perspective and healthy mindset, keeping a list of the season’s gifts and graces is the simplest. Somewhere along the line, I started rearranging it into a bell shape and now I can’t really stop. This season’s gathering of gifts and graces is one tall, skinny bell, but here it is, this winter’s list of simple things I’m grateful for.

cats
hot tea
crockpots
game nights
coffee shops
4-wheel drive
visits with family
sunrise & sunset
fleece-lined tights
birds at the feeder
a good snowstorm
the book of Proverbs
January skies. I mean.
The gospel. Every day.
kids home for Christmas
fresh starts and new mercies
middle and high school actors
pirate-themed costume parties
hard conversations & encouraging words
sons, daughters, and their significant others
flannel shirts—red or pink ones, in particular
wildlife footprints in the snow across the pond
sun streaming relentlessly in through the window
unexpected white space due to weather cancelations

If you’d like to keep a record of your season’s gifts and graces, I’ve made a simple, no-strings-attached printable just for that purpose. It’ll tuck into a journal, a planner, or even your Bible. Access it here–no strings attached. Get the printable..

What’s on your list? I’d love to hear!

happy trails  ~ Natalie

Sharing with the gathering of writers at Joanne’s

Give

Subscribe to the Daybreak Devotions for Women

Be inspired by God's Word every day! Delivered to your inbox.


Editor's Picks

  • featureImage

    Charlie Kirk: Man in the Arena

    Not all of us are to be political operatives and community activists, but all of can speak boldly about Christ. All of us can love and engage young people like Charlie Kirk did.

    5 min read
  • featureImage

    Do Christian Values Work in What We Call the "Real World"?

    In his classic text, The Contemplative Pastor, Eugene Peterson wrote:As a pastor, I don’t like being viewed as nice but insignificant. I bristle when a high-energy executive leaves the place of worship with the comment, ‘This was wonderful, Pastor, but now we have to get back to the real world, don’t we?’ I had thought we were in the most-real world, the world revealed as God’s, a world believed to be invaded by God’s grace and turning on the pivot of Christ’s crucifixion and resurrection. The e

    6 min read