Editor’s note: In addition to this article on the practice and benefits of gratitude, we’ve put together this guided meditation, led by this week’s author, Edie Raphael. Edie is a wonderful guide for these sessions and we know this meditation will be a valuable resource both for the holiday and in the future. Enjoy.
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Chances are good that on Thursday, you’ll find yourself sitting down to a meal of turkey, stuffing sweet potatoes, cranberry sauce and pumpkin pie. After the meal, you may feel sleepy or just full (possibly regretful?). But how about grateful?
Sometimes we forget the “thanks” in Thanksgiving, and that’s a shame because gratitude is like an emotional superfood. Gratitude engages us in a process of rewiring how we think and heightens our emotional well-being in numerous ways (**See the list at the end of this article for a small sampling). And one way to understand how gratitude rewires the brain is to start with the word itself. Gratitude means acknowledging the good. In fact, the Hebrew word for gratitude is Hakarat ha’tov — which literally translates to “looking for the good.” Gratitude shares the same latin root (gratia) with the word “grace” and is the basis for the word for “thanks” in Spanish (gracias) and Italian (grazias).
When we make a practice out of looking for the good, we begin to train our mind to see goodness in the world. For instance, Richard A. Emmon (one of the world’s leading researchers on gratitude) led a study in which people followed a three-week plan of actively expressing gratitude. Participants were interviewed at the end of the study and reported they:
In view of those fantastic benefits, here’s a Rewire starter guide to bring more gratitude into your world:
Chances are you have your own family tradition of saying thanks on special occasions such as Thanksgiving. Living a life with gratitude puts us in the posture of making every day of life a special occasion.
One last point about the Thanksgiving holiday and gratitude: Sometimes getting together with family is not completely joyful. It can be a lot of work entertaining folks. We may have relatives who are argumentative or critical. But there’s still an important place for gratitude practice even in challenging moments. Perhaps amid the noise and fuss, you can find appreciation for the chaos of the holiday as it increases your appreciation for the order you have the rest of the year. My grandmother referred to this dynamic as “getting lemons and making lemonade” but if you’ve ever tasted unsweetened cranberries, you can easily give this a Thanksgiving theme: “getting cranberries and making cranberry sauce.”
All of us at Rewire wish you and your family a peaceful and thankful Thanksgiving.
**A small sampling of easily-accessible articles from the past few years which explain the power of gratitude to rewire the brain for profound and lasting positive change:
See these 7 awesome benefits in this Forbes article. http://www.forbes.com/sites/amymorin/2014/11/23/7-scientifically-proven-benefits-of-gratitude-that-will-motivate-you-to-give-thanks-year-round/#64c1e9f36800
Evidence that gratitude practice rewires the brain in Inc. http://www.inc.com/jessica-stillman/the-amazing-way-gratitude-rewires-your-brain-for-happiness.html
Four studies which reveal more incredible benefits in Psychology Today. https://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/prefrontal-nudity/201211/the-grateful-brain
Some further discussion and explanation on gratitude studies from earlier this year in New York Magazine. http://nymag.com/scienceofus/2016/01/how-expressing-gratitude-change-your-brain.html
Here’s an older study which shows the power of gratitude journaling from the Huffington Post. http://www.huffingtonpost.com/ocean-robbins/having-gratitude-_b_1073105.html
For some more suggestions on how to cultivate gratitude look at this Harvard Health article. http://www.health.harvard.edu/newsletter_article/in-praise-of-gratitude