Join me this week . . . as I focus on gratitude.
I’m writing this post on Friday morning . . . after a lovely Thanksgiving meal yesterday, with probably too much wine, followed by a good night’s sleep, and – of course – a piece of pie for breakfast this morning. Thus fortified, I decided to tackle this post, the last entry for my Week of Gratitude.
Also . . . the post that’s been stewing around in my mind for a couple of weeks, but that just wasn’t quite “jelling” for me. Until I stumbled onto a random post on Instagram the other day (one of those posts that just . . . shows up, unbidden, from someone you don’t even follow). So, thank you @drsamanathaborardman, for helping me pull a few random thoughts together.
What has been rumbling around in my brain is this: It’s easy to think about gratitude in November, and especially during the week of Thanksgiving. What’s more challenging, of course, is to keep thinking about it every day; to make it part of your life. To turn gratitude . . . into a verb.
I am one of those people who say “thank you” a lot. It was the way I was brought up, and I still say “thank you” . . . all the time. Including in situations and to people that I don’t need to “thank.” (Them: “Sorry, we’ve lost your order.” Me: “Okay, thank you.” What am I thanking them for, exactly???) Anyway. Saying “thank you” is important, but saying it like a robot doesn’t make gratitude . . . a verb.
I’ve often heard and read that people who “count their blessings” regularly are happier and healthier than people who don’t. This often takes the form of a “gratitude journal,” with practitioners regularly listing things that went well for them/things they are grateful for . . . their blessings. I know that this practice works really well for lots of people, but – true confessions – it doesn’t work for me (and I’ve tried). After a couple of days, my lists feel . . . trite, like something is missing. It makes me feel like I’m listing what makes me happy, which also doesn’t make gratitude . . . a verb.
Then I read this article in the Harvard Business Journal by Professor Heidi Grant Halvorson, “Stop Making Gratitude All About You” . . . and a little light bulb went on in my head. (It’s short; worth a read.) In the article, Halvorson explains that practicing gratitude . . . is a lot more than being thankful for what we have.
“Recent research suggests that people often make a critical mistake when expressing gratitude: They focus on how they feel — how happy they are, how they have benefited from the help — rather than focusing on the benefactor.”
— Professor Heidi Grant Halvorson
This . . . is starting to get me closer to how I might make gratitude . . . a verb.
It also meshes well with some of the research findings from Adam Grant (someone I do regularly follow). Grant’s studies also highlight that gratitude is not limited to a passive listing of our blessings, and that reflecting on what we’ve contributed – instead of what we’ve received – is even more powerful. (Here’s a link to a brief, recent article by Grant.)
“According to a popular mantra, we should give without remembering and receive without forgetting. Our reserach suggests otherwise: we should take the time to remember both what we’ve given and what we’re received.
So this Thanksgiving, don’t just count your blessings. Count your contributions, too.”
— Adam Grant
So.
Here I am, on the day after Thanksgiving . . . (NOT shopping, thankfully) . . . trying to put my thoughts together on how to create a meaningful gratitude practice for myself — one that will last beyond Thanksgiving week, beyond the month of November. I’m feeling less bad about my personal distaste for the gratitude journaling thing . . . and more on track for finding a practice that will work for me.
Have I figured things out? Heck, no! But I do feel closer to figuring a few things out; how I might get closer to making gratitude . . . a verb.
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Thanks for coming along for the ride during my Week of Gratitude.
I thank you all from the bottom of my heart (and all the way to the top) for your friendship and the community we’ve created here.
What a lovely series, Kym – and I so appreciate how you ended it. I’ve been following Diana Butler Bass’s Grateful series this month (I read her book Grateful back in 2020 and it was a paradigm shift about gratitude) and the words you shared here seem like part of that same lesson. Thank you for sharing the links.
I’m not into the gratitude journaling either. It feels forced. Gratitude should be spontaneous and come from the heart ………not because you think you have to come up with 3 (or 5 or 100) things each day.
I don’t do the best with a gratitude list but like to include items of joy and delight. I guess I fudge on gratitude and include joy and also kindnesses offered and those received.
I like this line: we should give without remembering and receive without forgetting. I don’t mind forgetting what I give…but to receive without forgetting is so important. So thankful.
I also say “thank you” all the time. I’d rather say it too often, even unthinkingly, than too little. I like to think that even said mechanically some of the sentiment still seeps in to me and to the recipient. It’s interesting to me how many people have so much to say about gratitude – which seems to blend into the practice of giving. Love the one about forgetting what you give and remembering what you receive. So true. Chloe
I hear you here! I had a very good experience with a nightly gratitude list–but it came to a quiet end after some time. Just the writing down of it all, though, for the time I DID do it… I found it established the habit. What evolved was the habit of saying thank you out loud–either to the thing or person or to absolutely no one. Just…giving thanks, I guess…for whatever it was.
I’m a thank you-er as well, and you’re right that when it becomes so automatic that we don’t think about it, it pretty much loses the gratitude part of it. It is really hard to de-center ourselves when thinking about gratitude, but I think it’s worth it to focus on trying. I am wondering if rather than focusing on what I am grateful for (which I won’t stop doing, mind you), it would be worth it to focus more on being kind to and doing things for others — basically creating situations in which others can feel gratitude. This is something to think about for sure!
As you know, I’m one of the people who keeps a gratitude journal and it works for me, both as a way of remembering to feel grateful throughout the day, but also as a diary of sorts that sparks memories of special moments. One thing I’ve noticed is that my gratitude list often (very often) includes things I do with or for other people and, as an introvert, I find that sort of fascinating. I think you’re on a great path towards making gratitude work as a verb.
This post is going to provide food for thought for quite a while. Thank you! 🙂
Oh my, all the YESSES to this! I am likewise deeply desiring to make gratitude a verb in my life (and I am one of those Thank you People as well…old habits are so hard to break!)
I think this entire idea has the makings of a blog series! (hint hint hint) And I’d be so down for that. Sharing gratitude actions to help everyone!
And on a final note… thank you for this space, what you share here, and most especially for you! XO
The idea of other-praising opened my eyes. It’s framing the praise in a way that is about them! Wow. That’s a great idea.