Tuesday, June 10, 2014

Grateful for Gratitude

About a month ago I took a bus from the State of Mexico (where Beto and I currently live) back to Irapuato, where we met--and where we thought we would spend a great deal of our life together fighting poverty in the rural villages surrounding the city. Upon arriving in Irapuato I was met by a team of BYU students and their program director who had hired me to show them around the city, find them housing, and be their guide in the rural villages where they would be working as literacy instructors throughout the summer. I was in heaven!!! It felt incredible to be involved in “development” again, I was so at home in the rural communities, and my academic cravings were beyond satiated with endless talks of Mexican culture, history, and development.

I returned home buzzing with enthusiasm, only to come crashing into the hard wall of reality. Life in Mexico had turned out to be nothing like I had planned or imagined it to be. The weekend excursion into the villages was only that, a weekend, not my life. To ease out of my development high I decided to go back and read one of my favorite books from my economic development class. The book did nothing to pacify my development cravings. To the contrary, my desire to pursue what I am truly passionate about began to consume me. And with that growing desire, I came to the sad realization that my current job is everything I loathed most in school (and I loathed very few things, so it’s actually quite impressive I managed to get a job doing something I like so little!).  A new kind of frustration started creeping into my life and I became obsessed with finding a way to make my life in Mexico exactly what I had dreamed it would be. But the harder I pushed, the more dissatisfied I became and the more my vision of what I wanted began to blur.

And then one day it hit me: I had pulled a classic Ashley mistake. Once again I had started pushing so hard to achieve something that I knew was so good (and I mean, really, what could possibly be wrong with wanting to help the poor?!) that I forgot to ask the most important question of all: What does God want? And once I realized I’d forgotten to put God in the equation, I knew I had to put Him back in. In reality, what I needed to do was repent, to reconcile myself with God and put my will back in line with His. 

Now you may be thinking, “how do you know that pursuing humanitarian work isn’t God’s will?” And I would have to say that this was exactly my line of thinking. I assumed that since it was a good thing to do, it was God’s will (and I make that mistake all the time). But, as Elder Oak’s has so nicely put it, there is a difference between good, better, and best. Putting our will in line with God’s assures that we are not only doing something good, but doing the best work God has for us in life. In my case, I discovered that it was less about what I was (or wanted to be) doing in life and had more to do with my attitude about my circumstances that had misaligned me from the will of God. To be completely honest, though, it took me a while to figure that out.

When Beto and I talked about where we were going to live once we got married, I was all for the idea of living in Mexico. Not only were we going to have a chance to spend our lives working for a humanitarian agency, life in Mexico sounded like a challenge. And I love challenges! I’ve always embraced the idea of challenges (and I often deliberately put myself in challenging situations) because I believed that challenges are what make you stronger; but, just a few weeks ago, the only thing my challenges were doing was making me bitter, frustrated, and unsatisfied with my life in Mexico.

Without God in the equation, I looked at life in Mexico and all I saw was the disappointing loss of a job (and opportunity to work in rural development), visa rejection, extreme loneliness and home sickness, moving three times in the first six months of our marriage, boredom, low wages, three robberies, endless immigration paperwork issues, car failure galore, unmerited debt, a job I didn’t like, and every once in a while, culture shock. So I figured I had a right to feel miserable.

The problem with that line of thinking was that it was getting me nowhere and I knew it was not of God. So I had one of those conversations with my Heavenly Father where I owned up to my bad attitude and sincerely asked for his forgiveness and guidance. As I prayed, the scripture “all these things shall give thee experience” came to mind.  With that single line of scripture, I knew the Lord had given me my answer. The only problem was that it wasn’t the answer I wanted; and the answer felt a little incomplete. To make a long story short, I kept asking for more direction until one day when I realized that, if I was going to receive any more revelation, I needed to act on the revelation that I had received, which was that God wants me where I am because I need the experience.

So how was I to act on the revelation to to keep doing what I was doing? Was the answer I had received really to do nothing? In my opinion, the word act automatically connotes change. So if acting on the revelation I had received did not include changing my situation, what was it that needed changing? In reality, I didn’t have to think long to figure out what my real problem was, I needed to change my attitude. It really stunk. And I knew that the best place to start when you need to change your attitude is always gratitude. President Uchtdorf stated it better than I ever could in the April 2014 General Conference when he said:
Some might say, “What do I have to be grateful for when my world is falling apart?”
Perhaps focusing on what we are grateful for is the wrong approach. It is difficult to develop a spirit of gratitude if our thankfulness is only proportional to the number of blessings we can count. True, it is important to frequently “count our blessings”—and anyone who has tried this knows there are many—but I don’t believe the Lord expects us to be less thankful in times of trial than in times of abundance and ease. In fact, most of the scriptural references do not speak of gratitude for things but rather suggest an overall spirit or attitude of gratitude.
It is easy to be grateful for things when life seems to be going our way. But what then of those times when what we wish for seems to be far out of reach?
Could I suggest that we see gratitude as a disposition, a way of life that stands independent of our current situation? In other words, I’m suggesting that instead of being thankful for things, we focus on being thankful in our circumstances—whatever they may be.
President Uchtdorf’s words spoke to my soul the very first time that I heard them, and they came flooding back into my heart when I finally realized that my unhappiness was not a result of my circumstances, but rather my attitude. What is more, I finally learned that it is not the challenges in and of themselves that make us better disciples of Christ, but the way we choose to deal with them that actually makes the difference. Having an attitude of gratitude in our trials is what turns challenges into opportunities for discipleship growth. As President Uchtdorf explained, 
Being grateful in our circumstances is an act of faith in God. It requires that we trust God and hope for things we may not see but which are true. By being grateful, we follow the example of our beloved Savior, who said, “Not my will, but thine, be done.”
True gratitude is an expression of hope and testimony. It comes from acknowledging that we do not always understand the trials of life but trusting that one day we will.
"True gratitude is an expression of hope and testimony." I love that! As I sought to be more grateful in my circumstances, I began to feel real hope for the future again. Not only that, I began to appreciate the present as well. I even started to enjoy my job! With that added measure of hope and gratitude, another little miracle occurred, I started to feel the Spirit more abundantly. And with the Spirit as a constant companion, I began to see what I couldn’t when my attitude was on the wrong end of the spectrum: I could see what I can do now to help those around me. Suddenly everything was possible and beautiful. Life in Mexico could be that incredible adventure I always thought it would be. In fact, it had been an adventure all along! I simply had not been using the eyes of gratitude that would allow me to see it. Gratitude builds hope by allowing us an optimistic perspective of life. Gratitude brings the Spirit simply by the pure nature of the act. And most importantly, a testimony built on gratitude is a a testimony built independent of our circumstances. As President Uchtdorf stated,
It must have been this kind of testimony that transformed the Savior’s Apostles from fearful, doubting men into fearless, joyful emissaries of the Master. . . . They accepted with courage and determination the torture, humiliation, and even death that would come to them because of their testimony. They were not deterred from praising and serving their Lord. They changed the lives of people everywhere. They changed the world.
How blessed we are if we recognize God’s handiwork in the marvelous tapestry of life. 

How grateful I am for gratitude and the incredible power it has to bring hope, build testimony, and create a space in our heart where the Spirit can come and help us envision all that God knows we can accomplish in this crazy beautiful world. When I finally put my will in line with the Lord’s, I remembered that the reason I had always wanted to be involved with humanitarian work was so I could be a force for good to change the world. When I let gratitude become my attitude, I realized that I will never be limited by my circumstances to achieve such a goal because the Lord is mindful of me . . . and he wants the same thing.

2 comments:

  1. Ashley, you are one of my heroes, and this is why. Thank you for your wonderful example! Gratitud y ánimo, po! :)

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  2. We Paradise family members give this a two thumbs up!

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