Hey Lucie. . . remember this? I thought of it this morning - although it wasn't a glorious sunrise. . . still, I love the dawning of another day.
The morning itself, few inhabitants of cities know anything about. Among all our good people, not one in a thousand sees the sun rise once in a year. They know nothing of the morning. Their idea of it is that it is that part of the day which comes along after a cup of coffee and a piece of toast. With them, morning is not a new issuing of light, a new bursting forth of the sun, a new waking-up of all that has life from a sort of temporary death, to behold again the works of God, the heavens and the earth; it is only a part of the domestic day, belonging to reading newspapers, answering notes, sending the children to school, and giving orders for dinner. The first streak of light, the earliest purpling of the east, which the lark springs up to greet, and the deeper and deeper coloring into orange and red, till at length, the glorious sun is seen, regent of the day--this they never enjoy, for they never see it. I never thought that Adam had much the advantage of us from having seen the world while it was new. The manifestations of the power of God, like His mercies, are new every morning and fresh every moment. We see as fine risings of the sun as ever Adam saw; and its risings are as much a miracle now as they were in his day--and I think, a good deal more, because it is now part of the miracle, that for thousands and thousands of years it has come to its appointed time, without the variation of a millionth part of a second. I know the morning. I am acquainted with it, and I love it. I love it fresh and sweet as it is--a daily new creation, breaking forth and calling all that have life and breath and being to a new adoration, new enjoyments and new gratitude.-
Daniel Webster from The Return of the Ragpicker by Og Mandino
I pray everyone has a blessed and most wonderful day.

Too blessed to be stressed.
Knowledge is not enough, we must apply; willing is not enough, we must do. - Unknown