Practicing Gratitude
When it comes to practicing
gratitude, one trap to avoid is locating happiness in things that make
us feel better off—or simply better—than others. Such
thinking can foster envy and jealousy.
There
are marvelous respects in which we are equally blessed—the same sun
shines down upon each of us, we all begin each day with the same 24
hours, and each of us enjoys the free use of one of the most complex and
powerful resources in the universe, the human brain.
Much in our
culture seems aimed to cultivate an attitude of deficiency—for example,
most ads aim to make us think that to find happiness we must buy something. Yet most of the best things in life—the beauty of nature, conversation, and love—are free.
There
are many ways to cultivate a disposition of thankfulness. One is to
make a habit of giving thanks regularly—at the beginning of the day, at
meals and the like, and at day’s end.
Likewise, holidays, weeks, seasons, and years can be punctuated with thanks—grateful prayer or meditation, writing thank-you notes, keeping a gratitude journal, and consciously seeking out the blessings in situations as they arise.
Gratitude
can become a way of life, and by developing the simple habit of
counting our blessings, we can enhance the degree to which we are truly
blessed.