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experiencelifemag.com
Print › | Back ›
Get Grateful
Boost your health, hope and happiness with a powerful dose of gratitude.
By Karen Olson |
December 2006 |
The Benefits
of Gratitude
Share the Love
An Attitude of Gratitude
Ten years ago, Diana Rico began writing lists of the things she's grateful for.
An arts and entertainment journalist, independent filmmaker, and author who
divides her time between Taos, N.M., Los Angeles and Denver, Rico says she needs
to feel positive to do her creative work. And she's found that she can reliably
lift her mood just by writing down – first thing in the morning or last
thing at night – 10 things for which she's grateful.
"It changes my brain chemistry," she says. "I feel much more empowered when
I'm feeling positive."
Today, Rico recommends the gratitude list to students in her writer's-block
workshops. She believes it's easier for people to break through their fears
and avoidance when they take note of and appreciate the beauty that surrounds
them – a simple meal, flowers on the table, a child or a friendship. "I've
never seen anybody not get something positive out of doing the gratitude list."
As for herself, Rico has turned gratefulness into a way of life. "I actively
try to practice gratitude all the time," she says. "Everything is a blessing
in some form. I believe if you put yourself into a state of gratitude, it's
easier to manifest what you want."
Rico is one of a growing number of people – from artists to psychologists
to health researchers – who are recognizing the power of gratitude. Long
held by many religions and philosophers as a central element of human virtue,
gratitude is now being heralded by scientists as a verifiable component of a
healthy life.
The
Benefits of Gratitude (Back
to Top)
In their long-term scientific study on the nature of gratitude, psychologists
Robert Emmons, PhD, and Michael McCullough, PhD, found that grateful people
report "higher levels of positive emotions, life satisfaction, vitality, optimism,
and lower levels of depression and stress." Grateful people also tend to place
less importance on material goods and are less envious of others.
Emmons and McCullough found that people who keep gratitude journals (as opposed
to those who use their journals to describe hassles or neutral life events)
exercise more regularly, report fewer physical symptoms, feel better about their
lives as a whole and are more optimistic about the upcoming week. Those who
write gratitude lists are more likely to make significant progress toward achieving
important personal goals.
Grateful people also tend to have more optimism in general, which has been proven
in many studies to boost the immune system and improve outcomes for people with
compromised health.
Martin Seligman, PhD, a psychologist who in 1998 launched the field of positive
psychology, considers gratitude an important character strength. (Learn more
at www.authentichappiness.org.)
He and other positive psychology researchers see such strengths – which
also include qualities like integrity, perseverance, kindness and forgiveness
– as virtues that enable people to thrive.
If dwelling on negative events from your past keeps you from being happy, Seligman
says, gratitude and forgiveness can help. "Insufficient appreciation and savoring
of the good events in your past and overemphasis of the bad ones are the two
culprits that undermine serenity, contentment and satisfaction," he writes in
Authentic Happiness: Using the New Positive Psychology to Realize
Your Potential for Lasting Fulfillment (Free Press, 2004). "Gratitude
amplifies the savoring and appreciation of the good events gone by, and rewriting
history by forgiveness loosens the power of the bad events to embitter (and
actually can transform bad memories into good ones)."
According to Frederic and Mary Ann Brussat, authors of Spirituality
Rx: Prescriptions for Living a Meaningful Life (Hyperion, 2000)
and directors of Spirituality & Practice (www.spiritualityandpractice.com),
gratitude enhances satisfaction and counters the negative effects of greed,
jealousy, taking things for granted and feeling entitled. "The spiritual practice
of gratitude has been called a state of mind and a way of life," they write.
"But we prefer to think of it as a grammar – an underlying structure that
helps us construct and make sense out of our lives."
Share
the Love
Gratitude itself, it turns out, is something to be thankful for. The more you
practice it, the better you feel.
Those around you feel better, too. Emmons and McCullough note that gratitude
encourages a positive cycle of reciprocal kindness. In other words, one expression
of gratitude encourages another. They found that people who are grateful are
more likely to feel loved.
Gratitude also appears to encourage generosity, meaning that when we feel grateful
for what we have, we may be more likely to share freely with others –
and also to inspire and receive kindnesses from others. According to M. J. Ryan,
author of Attitudes of Gratitude: How to Give and Receive Joy Every
Day of Your Life(Conari Press, 1999), the interplay of gratitude
and generosity starts an ever-expanding circle of open-heartedness.
"It doesn't matter where you enter the circle – in gratitude or with generosity,"
she writes in The Giving Heart: Unlocking the Transformative Power
of Generosity in Your Life (Conari Press, 2000). "The more you experience
one, the more the other enhances your life as well. You feel truly grateful,
and from that fullness you offer something to someone else – an encouraging
word or a helping hand. In return, you receive love, the feeling of connection,
and a sense of satisfaction and fulfillment that continues to fuel your gratitude
for the gifts of life you have received."
So go ahead, be grateful. You'll feel healthier, and more positive – and
so will those around you.
Karen Olson is a Minneapolis-based writer and editor.
An
Attitude of Gratitude (Back
to Top)
To cultivate optimism, joy and serenity, try practicing the art of grateful
living.
Focus on your blessings. Close your eyes and
call to mind something to be grateful for, paying particular attention to your
feelings, suggests Charles Shelton, associate professor of psychology at Regis
University in Denver, in his book Achieving Moral Health: An Exercise
Plan for Your Conscience(Crossroad Publishing Company, 2000). After
a minute, open your eyes and ask yourself what you are feeling.
Keep a written record. Psychologists Robert Emmons,
PhD, and Michael McCullough, PhD, found that people who write about the things
they're grateful for feel healthier and more optimistic. Writer and teacher
Diana Rico suggests writing a daily list of 10 things you are grateful for.
Begin each sentence with the words "I am grateful for...." You'll notice how
uplifted you feel and how positive your outlook can become.
Write a gratitude letter. "Select one important
person from your past who has made a major positive difference in your life
and to whom you have never fully expressed your thanks," suggests Martin Seligman,
PhD, in Authentic Happiness (Free Press, 2004). Take
your time – a few days or even a few weeks – to write a one-page
testimonial about why this person is so important to you. Then get together
with the person you appreciate and read the testimonial out loud.
Designate a daily cue.Pick a daily activity –
maybe picking up a fork to eat a meal or walking in the door of your home –
that you can use as a cue to count your blessings, suggest Frederic and Mary
Ann Brussat in Spirituality Rx (Hyperion, 2000). With
practice, you will eventually experience an automatic flood of gratitude every
time you engage in that activity.
Express your appreciation."To learn the grammar
of gratitude," write the Brussats, "practice saying 'thank you' for happy and
challenging experiences, for people, animals, things, art, memories, dreams....Utter
blessings and express your appreciation to everything and everyone you encounter."
For more exercises to develop a sense of gratitude, visit www.gratefulness.orgor
www.spiritualityandpractice.com.
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Get Grateful
Boost your health, hope and happiness with a powerful dose of gratitude.
By Karen Olson | Renewal Department, December 2006 |
The Benefits
of Gratitude
Share the Love
An Attitude of Gratitude
Ten years ago, Diana Rico began writing lists of the things she's grateful for.
An arts and entertainment journalist, independent filmmaker, and author who
divides her time between Taos, N.M., Los Angeles and Denver, Rico says she needs
to feel positive to do her creative work. And she's found that she can reliably
lift her mood just by writing down – first thing in the morning or last
thing at night – 10 things for which she's grateful.
"It changes my brain chemistry," she says. "I feel much more empowered when
I'm feeling positive."
Today, Rico recommends the gratitude list to students in her writer's-block
workshops. She believes it's easier for people to break through their fears
and avoidance when they take note of and appreciate the beauty that surrounds
them – a simple meal, flowers on the table, a child or a friendship. "I've
never seen anybody not get something positive out of doing the gratitude list."
As for herself, Rico has turned gratefulness into a way of life. "I actively
try to practice gratitude all the time," she says. "Everything is a blessing
in some form. I believe if you put yourself into a state of gratitude, it's
easier to manifest what you want."
Rico is one of a growing number of people – from artists to psychologists
to health researchers – who are recognizing the power of gratitude. Long
held by many religions and philosophers as a central element of human virtue,
gratitude is now being heralded by scientists as a verifiable component of a
healthy life.
The
Benefits of Gratitude (Back
to Top)
In their long-term scientific study on the nature of gratitude, psychologists
Robert Emmons, PhD, and Michael McCullough, PhD, found that grateful people
report "higher levels of positive emotions, life satisfaction, vitality, optimism,
and lower levels of depression and stress." Grateful people also tend to place
less importance on material goods and are less envious of others.
Emmons and McCullough found that people who keep gratitude journals (as opposed
to those who use their journals to describe hassles or neutral life events)
exercise more regularly, report fewer physical symptoms, feel better about their
lives as a whole and are more optimistic about the upcoming week. Those who
write gratitude lists are more likely to make significant progress toward achieving
important personal goals.
Grateful people also tend to have more optimism in general, which has been proven
in many studies to boost the immune system and improve outcomes for people with
compromised health.
Martin Seligman, PhD, a psychologist who in 1998 launched the field of positive
psychology, considers gratitude an important character strength. (Learn more
at www.authentichappiness.org.)
He and other positive psychology researchers see such strengths – which
also include qualities like integrity, perseverance, kindness and forgiveness
– as virtues that enable people to thrive.
If dwelling on negative events from your past keeps you from being happy, Seligman
says, gratitude and forgiveness can help. "Insufficient appreciation and savoring
of the good events in your past and overemphasis of the bad ones are the two
culprits that undermine serenity, contentment and satisfaction," he writes in
Authentic Happiness: Using the New Positive Psychology to Realize
Your Potential for Lasting Fulfillment (Free Press, 2004). "Gratitude
amplifies the savoring and appreciation of the good events gone by, and rewriting
history by forgiveness loosens the power of the bad events to embitter (and
actually can transform bad memories into good ones)."
According to Frederic and Mary Ann Brussat, authors of Spirituality
Rx: Prescriptions for Living a Meaningful Life (Hyperion, 2000)
and directors of Spirituality & Practice (www.spiritualityandpractice.com),
gratitude enhances satisfaction and counters the negative effects of greed,
jealousy, taking things for granted and feeling entitled. "The spiritual practice
of gratitude has been called a state of mind and a way of life," they write.
"But we prefer to think of it as a grammar – an underlying structure that
helps us construct and make sense out of our lives."
Share
the Love (Back to Top)
Gratitude itself, it turns out, is something to be thankful for. The more you
practice it, the better you feel.
Those around you feel better, too. Emmons and McCullough note that gratitude
encourages a positive cycle of reciprocal kindness. In other words, one expression
of gratitude encourages another. They found that people who are grateful are
more likely to feel loved.
Gratitude also appears to encourage generosity, meaning that when we feel grateful
for what we have, we may be more likely to share freely with others –
and also to inspire and receive kindnesses from others. According to M. J. Ryan,
author of Attitudes of Gratitude: How to Give and Receive Joy Every
Day of Your Life(Conari Press, 1999), the interplay of gratitude
and generosity starts an ever-expanding circle of open-heartedness.
"It doesn't matter where you enter the circle – in gratitude or with generosity,"
she writes in The Giving Heart: Unlocking the Transformative Power
of Generosity in Your Life (Conari Press, 2000). "The more you experience
one, the more the other enhances your life as well. You feel truly grateful,
and from that fullness you offer something to someone else – an encouraging
word or a helping hand. In return, you receive love, the feeling of connection,
and a sense of satisfaction and fulfillment that continues to fuel your gratitude
for the gifts of life you have received."
So go ahead, be grateful. You'll feel healthier, and more positive – and
so will those around you.
Karen Olson is a Minneapolis-based writer and editor.
An
Attitude of Gratitude (Back
to Top)
To cultivate optimism, joy and serenity, try practicing the art of grateful
living.
Focus on your blessings. Close your eyes and
call to mind something to be grateful for, paying particular attention to your
feelings, suggests Charles Shelton, associate professor of psychology at Regis
University in Denver, in his book Achieving Moral Health: An Exercise
Plan for Your Conscience(Crossroad Publishing Company, 2000). After
a minute, open your eyes and ask yourself what you are feeling.
Keep a written record. Psychologists Robert Emmons,
PhD, and Michael McCullough, PhD, found that people who write about the things
they're grateful for feel healthier and more optimistic. Writer and teacher
Diana Rico suggests writing a daily list of 10 things you are grateful for.
Begin each sentence with the words "I am grateful for...." You'll notice how
uplifted you feel and how positive your outlook can become.
Write a gratitude letter. "Select one important
person from your past who has made a major positive difference in your life
and to whom you have never fully expressed your thanks," suggests Martin Seligman,
PhD, in Authentic Happiness (Free Press, 2004). Take
your time – a few days or even a few weeks – to write a one-page
testimonial about why this person is so important to you. Then get together
with the person you appreciate and read the testimonial out loud.
Designate a daily cue.Pick a daily activity –
maybe picking up a fork to eat a meal or walking in the door of your home –
that you can use as a cue to count your blessings, suggest Frederic and Mary
Ann Brussat in Spirituality Rx (Hyperion, 2000). With
practice, you will eventually experience an automatic flood of gratitude every
time you engage in that activity.
Express your appreciation."To learn the grammar
of gratitude," write the Brussats, "practice saying 'thank you' for happy and
challenging experiences, for people, animals, things, art, memories, dreams....Utter
blessings and express your appreciation to everything and everyone you encounter."
For more exercises to develop a sense of gratitude, visit www.gratefulness.orgor
www.spiritualityandpractice.com.
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