I love you more than rainbows

Intention Attracts

Photographed taken from Borders Website

On the weekend I promised my daughter that I was going to take her on the Cruise Ship on Friday afternoon. As the afternoon approached my energy was drained and I prayed that she fell asleep before I could take her. For each secret thought of mine her opened rebuttal was ‘mama I am going on the Cruise Ship.’ Of course I did not want to disappoint her. I tried to bargain with her and told her that we will go the next day; she insisted ‘no Mama we should go at four o’clock.’

We aboard the Logos Hope- Book Ship went up the ramp and sat through a presentation. When we entered the store, behold, displayed in front of me was the book “I Love You More Than Rainbows,” do you remember that post? I was captivated; the energy surrounding us almost rocked the book off the shelf into my hands.  When I first heard about the book I searched all of the local bookstores and it was not available. I went to Amazon and put it on my wish list. So on Friday, when I held it in my hand my daughter said “Mama remember it on the computer?”

Isn’t the power of intention a potent phenomenon?  I hope that the things you have on your wish list and the obstacles that may litter your path are driving forces to make the good things on your list a reality.


 

I Love You More Than Rainbows

Family Moments and love

Photographed by Beckie Lee

“I Love You More Than Rainbows” when I heard (singer/songwriter) Ryan Bingham say this phrase to his wife at the 82nd Annual Academy Awards my first reaction was that it evokes images of someone who is rare and precious. It is more than a phrase it is a book by Susan E. Crites. My daughter has a similar book by Sam McBratney called “Guess How Much I Love You.” It’s about a hare and his son. He is telling his son he loves him and always will love him.  It is so amazing to think that these animated characters and simple poems can express so much love. Poems can express so clearly our emotions, from sadness to anger, from joy to boredom, we who write know how easy it is to put our minds and souls in text. Yet we also know that no words can ever convey how we truly feel. Maybe we can compare a poem to a snapshot from a black and white camera, and a book based on a poem is like a snapshot taken with high-definition Technicolor clarity. I do love my family more than rainbows and I’m glad that books – however brief can capture that reality so eloquently. This is an excerpt from Susan E. Crites’ book:

I love you more than rainbows and beautiful skies.

I love you more than buttercups and wings of butterflies.

I love you more than ice cream with sprinkles on the top,

Or jumping in the pool with a great big belly flop!