The narrator talks about how she is “blessed” in many ways.
In the Greatest Hits booklet, McBride called the song a great track and how she felt it was written for her, although it wasn't specifically written for the singer.[4]
Music video
Deaton-Flanigen Productions, a production company which specializes in country music videos, filmed the video for "Blessed". While the video is set in a forest, it was actually filmed on a sound stage in Nashville, Tennessee. It is the first video of hers to feature her two older daughters, Delaney and Emma, both of whom would later be featured in the videos for "This One's for the Girls" (2003) and "Teenage Daughters" (2011). The video also features McBride's husband John McBride. The video premiered to Country Music Television (CMT) on December 9, 2001.[5] It was a huge hit and would be nominated at the inaugural 2002 CMT Flameworthy Awards for Female Video of the Year and Fashion Plate Video of the Year, with Deaton-Flanigen nominated for Video Director of the Year. "Blessed" would win Female Video, losing Fashion Plate Video to Chely Wright's "Jezebel" while Deaton-Flanigen won Video Director.[6]
"Blessed" debuted at number 56 on the US BillboardHot Country Songs chart for the week of November 3, 2001. In March 2002, it peaked at number one, becoming McBride's fifth and final number one hit on the chart. It was also the last song by a solo female artist to top the chart until Gretchen Wilson's debut single "Redneck Woman" in 2004.