Dear Diary,
It was –9 degrees today, the kind of cold that bites your eyelashes and makes the whole world feel brittle. We were supposed to go to Mass, but Robert couldn’t come—he was having livestock trouble. One of his cows had gotten out on the corn stubble again, and he was trying to push her off the field and into his little cattle shed, and it just wouldn’t go right. So the church ride didn’t happen, and we stayed home, where the Lord had plenty of work waiting anyway.
Sister Mary Claire said, “Then we’ll do our duties with extra love,” and we spent the day caring for everything at Littlemore. The chickens were my special worry. Their water kept trying to turn into a solid block, so I kept a tea kettle on the stove all day. Every two hours, like a little bell inside my head, I took the kettle out to the chicken house. I gathered eggs, too—warm ones tucked under cold feathers—and then I poured hot water into the pan to melt what had started to ice over. It felt like such a small thing, but in that kind of weather it’s the difference between comfort and misery for our hens. Sister and I worked together, and even though the wind made our faces sting, we didn’t complain much—because there were hungry creatures counting on us.
Later, when we finally warmed our hands again, Sister and I read today’s meditation together about the labor of Jesus in His hidden life. It said Jesus chose poor, ordinary work—hard work—like a carpenter, and that He did it on purpose to sanctify labor and make it something holy. Sister explained it in a way I could really understand. She said Jesus didn’t just work with His hands—He worked with His heart pointed straight at His Father the whole time. Even when He was doing the plainest chores, He stayed in prayer inside, and He offered every bit of effort like a gift.
Sister told me that’s how we can make our own work shine to God too:
First, we should do our duties because they are God’s will for us right now, not because we feel like it.
Second, we should keep our intention clean—no showing off, no grumbling, no doing things only for praise—just doing them for love.
Third, we can keep a little “thread” of prayer going while we work, like whispering, “Jesus, I do this with You,”even if our hands are busy.
And lastly, when the work feels heavy or dull, we can offer that part as a small penance, the way Jesus bore the heat of the day without being seen by crowds.
When I went back out with the kettle again, I tried it. I held the warm handle and thought, Jesus worked in a little workshop. I’m working in a little chicken house. He knows what it is to do small things over and over. Somehow the cold didn’t feel quite so bossy after that.
Tonight the stove is still going, and the kettle is finally resting. Sister and I are tired in the good way—like the day was used up the way it ought to be.
Evening Prayer:
O Jesus, who did all things well, thank You for the hidden work of this day. Please bless Robert and help him with his cow, and keep all the animals safe in this terrible cold. Teach me to do even the smallest chores with a clean heart, without complaining, and to stay close to You while I work. Let my hands be helpful, and let my work be an offering of love. Mary, keep us under your mantle tonight, and keep our home warm and peaceful. Amen.
Love, Kathy






