Send us a text Jesus, in his Parable of the Talents, vividly illustrates how human life and God’s kingdom work. Our life is a story we co-write with God, who hands us plot outlines: geography, gender, genetics, socio-economic position, creativity, health, personality, temperament, as well as our unique, innate gifts. God, considering our abilities, assigns us niches in his ecosystem, prominent vocations, or quieter ones. But God is kind to all, lavishing on us life itself, nature, sunshine, sleep, the joy of movement, and human kindness. As well as individual gifts! We each have 600 to 700 talents– Rick Warren cites research! –most of which we never use. Our vocations are a test, and our happiness and biography pivot on how we use our gifts. Those who rarely squander time but invest in their talents lead ever-bigger lives. Their gifting and influence expands exponentially. They spot and mine hidden opportunities, and experience success, financially, too; an always-interesting life, and the exhilaration of achieving their goals with good work which blesses many. Some, though, do not nurture their talents, feeling resentful and defeated as they side-eye those with five times their assets of family, education, charisma, connections, capital, time, intelligence, good looks or good sense. Fearing their work may come to nothing, they attempt little, leading grudging, lazy lives. Their talents, unused, wither, creating a vacuum for the hard-working to shine. This slothfulness leads to loneliness, sadness, and judgement, while the gifts of the diligent multiply. To savour the excitement of living, we need eyes bright with bounce-out-of-bed purpose—and the gift of purpose has been given to us: to focus our lives on excellent work with our gifts, great or small. This delivers us from wasting our precious lives on triviality. It rescues us from a black hole of addictions to success, money, fame, or phones. It is the pathway to happiness and abundance. And, on any day, during any decade of our lives, we can start revising them, and rewrite a beautiful new story. And though we may be well, well behind those who have steadfastly used their abilities, if we now assess what we can do with our current strength and energy, which changes as we do, and then nourish our neglected gifts, starting with those which most make our hearts sing, those talents will blossom, filling the rest of our lives with aliveness, new interests, and new opportunities to be a blessing to the world which God so loves. And, in God’s kindness, our five loaves may yet feed five thou My memoir: Rosaries, Reading, Secrets: A Catholic Childhood in India UK USA Blog: anitamathias.com Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/anitamathiaswriter/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/anita.mathias/ Twitter : anitamathias1 My book of essays: Wandering Between Two Worlds (US) and UK