I sit back in my chair at the dining table and rub my belly.
I tell my wife,”That was delicious, honey.” And it was. She’s become quite the cook!
My 2-year-old, always the copycat, stands up in his chair and lifts his shirt. He rubs his hands across his little, round belly.
“Delishus momma!”
Then he turns to me, giggling.
“Wook daddy … my tummy is big!”
I reach over and rub his warm tummy as he cracks up.
He wouldn’t know how to express it just yet, but that warm, full-belly feeling is satisfaction.
A full tummy is a satisfied tummy. And I’m satisfied too. There’s a certain satisfaction that comes with knowing that I can provide for my family.
Both of my boys are healthy. They have healthy appetites. We are blessed.
But I’m also reminded of the fathers around the world who work much harder than I do and still can’t put enough food on the table.
I’m reminded of little bellies that groan and growl. I think of the 2-year-olds who aren’t giggling today but crying, hoping for anything to fill their empty stomachs.
I think of the single mothers who struggle with the cost of daycare so they can go to work just to buy a meager amount of groceries.
There are more than 1 billion people on this planet who don’t have enough to eat.
That sentence alone should enrage you. It should move you. It should give us all motivation to do something about it.
Today is World Food Day.
A day to realize how blessed we are just for having a chance to eat a meal and get a full tummy.
Maybe this year you can join the thousands of caring people who will decide to skip one meal and give that cost to feed hungry children.
Maybe you’re called to pray for the hungry or clean out the pantry, make a trip to the grocery store, and help stock the food pantry at your church.
Maybe you’ll write a blog post about World Food Day and link it up below so we can all benefit from your perspective.
However you honor World Food Day, do something. Everyone should get that satisfaction of a full tummy.
Heck, everyone should get a tummy rub!
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Spreading the word about World Food Day and IDEP. Check it out! http://passionateforcompassion.blogspot.com/2011/10/world-food-day-and-international-day.html
Its amazing how easy it is in the US to have access to food in comparison to third world countries. Spending time in prayer for organizations like Compassion that help meet the needs of families in poverty who need food!
This is the exact reason I started sponsoring 30+ years ago. I was able to feed my child – but somewhere around the world, other mothers could not. From gratitude for what I was blessed with, I wanted to help those whom I could. One mother to another.
Strange how “International Talk Like A Pirate Day” is better advertised than either of these two days…
I wish I knew that today was World Food Day sooner. I’ll do it tomorrow instead.
Wow, though 1 bill.?!
And Lizzie, tomorrow is World Poverty Day so you can recognize them both on the same day.