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Sunday, June 29, 2025

The Lamp That Glowed The Path : A Tale of Gratitude, Prayer, and Everyday Miracles


                     “ Sunday Stories: The Success Secrets of Extraordinary”

In the little village of Manoharpur, nestled between two hills and hugged by a gentle river, lived a boy named Abhay. His family wasn’t rich, but they were content. Abhay’s father was a tailor who stitched clothes with care, and his mother sold fresh and hot homemade snacks every morning from a small stall by the school gate.


Abhay was 11—curious, kind, and a dreamer. But lately, he had begun to compare his life with others. His friend Veer had a cycle with shiny spokes and a horn that squeaked like a duck. Another classmate, Priya, had glitter pens and a new lunchbox every term.


One rainy day, Abhay came home grumbling, “Why do we have so little? Why don’t prayers work for us?”

His mother handed him a towel, smiled softly, and said, “Come with me.”

She led him to a quiet corner of their home where a simple clay lamp sat beside a small framed photo of a mountain and river. It wasn’t a god’s picture—just a scene. “This is where I pray,” she said. “Not for things, but for strength, peace, and the wisdom to see what I already have.”

Abhay frowned. “But what’s the use of prayer if it doesn’t give us what we need?”

She lit the lamp. The flame danced gently. “Sit here each night,” she said, “Say thank you—not just ask. Thank your legs for walking, your eyes for seeing, your school for teaching. Try it for one week.”

๐Ÿช” The Challenge of Gratitude

Grumbling at first, Abhay tried. That night, he sat before the lamp.

“Thank you for the roof,” he mumbled. “Thank you for school. I guess.”

Then each day he started observing things around him carefully and keenly. In fact he started searching and thinking positively what he can thank for each day.  

Soon something started changing. He noticed his father humming while stitching clothes, making old things new for others. He noticed how his mother secretly gave free snacks to a poor boy who came barefoot. 


At school, he saw Veer get scolded despite his fancy cycle, and Priya cry in the library—her parents were always fighting at home.


Slowly, Abhay’s grumbles became thanks. He started praying not to get more, but to become more—more helpful, more patient, more joyful. 

He helped his mother pack the stall, carried his father’s sewing kit, and began tutoring a younger boy who couldn’t read well.

One day, his teacher announced a speech competition. The topic: “My Greatest Treasure.”

Others spoke about gadgets, toys, and trips. Abhay stood last. He simply said:

“My greatest treasure is a clay lamp, and what it taught me: To say thank you even when things aren’t perfect. Gratitude doesn’t change the world outside—it changes the way you see it. And prayer doesn’t always bring things to your door, but it opens your heart.”

The room was silent. And then, it erupted in applause.

๐ŸŒŸ The Glow That Stayed

Abhay didn’t win a trophy, but something far better. He became someone others admired—not for his clothes or lunchbox, but for the light he carried inside.

Years later, he would light the same lamp every evening in his home, which is now a school for underprivileged children.

And each child he taught learned to pause, close their eyes, whisper “thank you,” and open them a little more ready—for life, for love, and for small miracles.

Moral: 
"Gratitude turns what we have into enough, and prayer lights the path ahead."

๐ŸŽ‰ Campaign Title: 

1. Take up a challenge - Make No Complaints Jar

A playful method for reducing complaining and fostering a more positive attitude.


๐Ÿ Step-by-Step Guide to Use the No Complaints Jar

๐Ÿท️ 1. Label the Jar Clearly
Write “No Complaints Jar” on it to keep the purpose visible and intentional.

⏱️ 2. Set a Time Period
Choose a time frame (e.g., 7 days, 21 days, 1 month) for the challenge.

๐Ÿ“œ 3. Make the Rules Simple
Each time you catch yourself complaining, you:
Drop a coin or a note into the jar (penalty method), or
Remove a coin (reward method) if you go complaint-free for a full day.
Optional: Instead of money, use folded paper slips with positive affirmations, gratitude notes, or learnings from that complaint moment.

๐Ÿ’ญ 4. Track and Reflect
At the end of each day:
Reflect on what triggered complaints.
Write down what you could do instead (e.g., gratitude, solution thinking).

๐Ÿ’ก 5. Involve Others
Make it a family, class, or team challenge:
Create shared accountability.
Celebrate milestones together (e.g., complaint-free day).

๐Ÿง  Psychological Benefits
Builds self-awareness of negative thinking patterns.
Encourages solution-based thinking instead of venting.
Fosters gratitude and mindfulness.

4 comments:

  1. Encouraging Story..Yes we should be Thankful for whatever we are having.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Yes we should be thankful for whatever we are having. Good story madam.

    ReplyDelete
  3. เคˆเคถ्เคตเคฐाเคจे เคœे เค•ाเคนी เค†เคชเคฒ्เคฏाเคฒा เคช्เคฐเคฆाเคจ เค•ेเคฒे เค†เคนेเคค เคคे เค“เคณเค–ा เคต เคค्เคฏाเคšी เคตाเคข เคต เคตिเค•ाเคธ เค•เคฐा

    ReplyDelete
  4. เค–ूเคช เคธुंเคฆเคฐ, เคจเคตी เคช्เคฐेเคฐเคฃा, เคจเคตा เค†เคจंเคฆ เค•ृเคคเคœ्เคžเคคा เค†เคฃि เคช्เคฐाเคฐ्เคฅเคจा เคถ्เคฐेเคท्เค 

    ReplyDelete

The Lamp That Glowed The Path : A Tale of Gratitude, Prayer, and Everyday Miracles

                     “ Sunday Stories: The Success Secrets of Extraordinary”