Fill’er up with love

Gas Sign

by Evan Mehlenbacher

I just paid over $36 to fill up my gas tank.

Ouch! The expense hurt in my pocketbook.

Not too long ago gas was $1.50 a gallon.

While standing near the fuel pump and watching the digits on the gas meter click upward at mind-numbing rates, I started to criticize how expensive gas has become. What’s going on? I’ve read newspaper articles about the billions and billions of profits piling up in oil company coffers. I thought about conflict in the Mideast, much of it arguably centered on protecting oil supplies. And then I started to sum-up the hundreds of dollars I would spend this year at gas stations and it was a lot!

As I stood under a gas sign that cynically labeled the price of regular gas, “An arm,” the price of premium, “A leg,” and the price of supreme, “Your first child,” I was getting heated up about the squeeze oil companies were putting on my wallet.

A subtle tide of resentment began to sweep through my mind over the high price of gas. What could I do? I wondered.

Suddenly, I thought, “Wait a minute! Something is wrong here. I can’t let the cost of fuel steal my peace of mind.”

One of my daily goals is to keep my thinking inspired and not let it get pulled into negativity. I believe God has given me a good life to live, and I can live it. It’s a choice I make. But I’ve learned from experience when I let anger or resentment take over, that good life has a way of disappearing. Negative emotions rob me of my joy and positive outlook.

Stop! No more anger! The angel message arrived and it was “Fill’er up with love!”

It wasn’t what poured into the tank of my car and its effect on my wallet that mattered most, but what was pouring into my consciousness.

I needed to keep my thinking filled with love.

Fill’er up with love! I liked that order! I could keep my thinking flooded with positive impressions no matter what price gas reached. The cost of anger was too expensive in terms of lost well being and joy to justify getting upset about oil prices that jet up and down.

I wasn’t resigned to living with it, though. Fill’er up with love! The pronouncement kept repeating and I obeyed.

There were many practical steps I could take to adjust my budget for this expense. I could drive less, spend less on other items, plan for buying a car with better gas mileage, or carpool. But even more importantly, I could trust that God would meet whatever need I faced in the future. The resources of divine Mind are infinite, and can take any number of forms, including wisdom, inspiration, and insight to solve problems in original and creative ways. I was not stuck in my options.

Christian Science has taught me to pursue spiritual mindedness as a top priority. “To be spiritually minded is life and peace,” the Bible tells us. Anger and resentment are enemies to peace of mind and need to be displaced with love and goodwill to preserve life.

So, I dropped the resentment toward the oil conglomerates. I quit moaning over the flying digits on the gas pump, and stopped fretting about how to pay for gas over the next year. I ended the negativity and became grateful that I had a car, that gas was available, that I had money to buy fuel and that I could expect answers to come from God on how best to prepare for the future. I filled my thought with love, and I felt a whole lot better.

Next time you pull up to the gas pump and prepare to shell out a fistful of cash, you, too, can “Fill’er up with love!” It’s a lot more enjoyable, and the effect on your health and well being is much better than getting angry and upset.