It was turning out to be another rushed and harried holiday season.
When
 I was younger, I had envisioned peaceful Christmases filled with 
twinkling lights and glistening snow, with me seated before a fireplace 
and surrounded by my dream family.
To
 my disappointment, however, as a young adult I still had not seen the 
fulfillment of that dream. Instead, my time and energy during Christmas 
were being spent on my work as a schoolteacher and on various 
holiday-related activities. As my involvement in these activities 
increased and my to-do list grew longer, I felt more and more 
overwhelmed.
In
 the middle of the chaos came a request from a friend for our young 
single adult group to sing at a local nursing home. It was to be a 
family home evening presentation for the elderly patients there. I must 
admit that I didn’t really want to go, but I halfheartedly consented 
anyway.
Monday
 evening came, and when I got to the nursing home I was relieved that 
the hour had arrived—the service project would soon be erased from my 
to-do list.
A
 group of patients in wheelchairs had been gathered together in a cold, 
sterile room. A woman with silver hair and a tremulous voice opened our 
family home evening with prayer. She petitioned our Heavenly Father and 
sincerely and humbly said, “We thank Thee for all of our many 
blessings.” Blessings? I was puzzled by 
the thought. How could she see her world of wheelchairs, bedpans, 
hospital food, lonely days and nights, dependency, crippled limbs, and 
faded youth as blessings? The woman finished the prayer, and my thoughts
 were filled with wonder at her expression of gratitude.
Our group stood and began to sing.
Slippered
 feet tapped on foot rests, gnarled fingers kept time, and smiles 
appeared at the sound of the familiar melodies. Their expressions 
mirrored ours as we sang of Christmas delights and heavenly gifts. 
Something warm and magical gradually seemed to fill the room.
I
 gazed into the ageless eyes of the onlookers and found myself floating 
in their warmth and wisdom. They too had been teachers or carolers in a 
choir—married, single, parents, or childless.
The
 final notes of the closing song drifted softly around the room: “Sleep 
in heavenly peace.” A benediction was offered. My spirit was subdued and
 quieted.
My
 view of Christmas and of life began to change that night. For one 
moment I could see that I didn’t need to worry so much about what I felt
 was lacking in my own life. I sensed that within the withered physical 
bodies of those to whom we had sung were spirits filled with happiness, 
gratitude, and God’s love. No matter the person’s age or station in 
life, a portion of that love and happiness was there, if only I had eyes
 to see, ears to hear, and a heart to fill—with gratitude.
 
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