Blessed Hands: A Stoic Stoner Salute to Labor Day
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Labor Day Thoughts |
Title: Blessed Hands: A Stoic Stoner Salute to Labor Day
Ah, Labor Day. A day to kick back, light up, and contemplate the divine absurdity of work. Whether you're hauling boxes, flipping burgers, or just flipping through life's chaos, there's a quiet truth in the grind: God will bless your efforts.
Yeah, that's right. There's a verse tucked away in the Good Book reminding us that effort — your honest, sometimes sweaty, sometimes barely coherent effort — matters. It doesn't have to be glamorous. It doesn't have to earn you a medal. Even if your "labor" is just showing up and not losing your mind, it counts.
The Stoic Stoner way? Respect the effort, not the applause. Smoke a little, reflect a lot, and remember: the universe (and maybe God) notices the work you put in, even if it's just cleaning the temple of your own home — or, in our case, scrubbing the ashtray without judgment.
So today:
- Raise a joint (or a coffee mug) to your hands — the ones that toil, the ones that create, the ones that survive the absurdity of modern life.
- Remember the divine blessing in action: not just in finished products, but in showing up.
- And maybe laugh a little at how seriously humans take labor. It's work, yes. But life? That's the real gig.
This Labor Day, let's honor our efforts without taking ourselves too seriously. The work is sacred. The labor is blessed. And if you're lucky, the smoke and the sun will remind you that you're alive, doing, trying, and, in the cosmic ledger, getting counted.
Parting Puff of Wisdom:
"God blesses not the idle, nor the perfect, but the hands that dare to do."
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