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Gratitude comes with benefits − a social psychologist explains how to practice it when times are stressful

Gratitude comes with benefits − a social psychologist explains how to practice it when times are stressful

  • Practicing gratitude can have numerous benefits for mental well-being, relationships, and overall happiness, despite the current stressful times.
  • The negativity bias, which makes us more aware of negative information than positive, can make it challenging to notice and appreciate kindnesses from others. Cultivating gratitude can help counteract this bias.
  • Gratitude is a positive emotion that focuses on others’ care or actions, rather than one’s own accomplishments or luck. It has been shown to increase well-being, happiness, relationship satisfaction, and lower depression.
  • Two simple ways to practice gratitude are by keeping a daily list of positive experiences from others (e.g., a “gratitude journal”) or expressing gratitude to others through letters or other forms of communication.
  • By incorporating these practices into your daily routine, you can increase your ability to notice and appreciate the good things in life, even during stressful times, and experience the benefits of gratitude for yourself.

If the concept of journaling feels daunting, perhaps just call it a gratitude list. Karl Tapales/Moment via Getty Images

A lot has been written about gratitude over the past two decades and how we ought to be feeling it. There is advice for journaling and a plethora of purchasing options for gratitude notebooks and diaries. And research has consistently pointed to the health and relationship benefits of the fairly simple and cost-effective practice of cultivating gratitude.

Yet, Americans are living in a very stressful time, worried about their financial situation and the current political upheaval.

How then do we practice gratitude during such times?

I am a social psychologist who runs the Positive Emotion and Social Behavior Lab at Gonzaga University. I teach courses focused on resilience and human flourishing. I have researched and taught about gratitude for 18 years.

At the best of times, awareness of the positive may require more effort than noticing the negative, let alone in times of heightened distress. There are, however, two simple ways to work on this.

A team of soccer players lift their coach into the air, as she smiles and high fives the air.

Expressions of gratitude can take many different forms.
Lighthouse Films/DigitalVision via Getty Images

Gratitude doesn’t always come easily

Generally, negative information captures attention more readily than the positive. This disparity is so potent that it’s called the negativity bias. Researchers argue that this is an evolutionary adaptation: Being vigilant for life’s harms was essential for survival.

Yet, this means that noticing the kindnesses of others or the beauty the world has to offer may go unnoticed or forgotten by the end of the day. That is to our detriment.

Gratitude is experienced as a positive emotion. It results from noticing that others − including friends and family certainly, but also strangers, a higher power or the planet − have provided assistance or given something of value such as friendship or financial support. By definition, gratitude is focused on others’ care or on entities outside of oneself. It is not about one’s own accomplishments or luck.

When we feel gratitude toward something or someone, it can increase well-being and happiness and relationship satisfaction, as well as lower depression.

Thus, it may assist in counteracting the negativity bias by helping us find and remember the good that others are doing for us every day − the good that we may lose sight of in the best of times, let alone in times when Americans are deeply stressed.

A middle-aged woman sits at a kitchen table between two older women, all of whom are laughing joyously.

We feel gratitude more easily when we notice the good that others have brought into our lives.
Catherine Falls Commercial/Moment via Getty Images

How to practice gratitude

Research has shown that some people are naturally more grateful than others.

But it’s also clear that gratitude can be cultivated through practice. People can improve their ability to notice and feel this positive emotion.

One way to do this is to try a gratitude journal. Or, if the idea of journaling is daunting or annoying, perhaps call it a daily list instead. If you have given this a try and dislike it, skip to the second method below.

Gratitude lists are designed to create a habit in which you scan your day looking for the positive outcomes that others have brought into your life, no matter how small. Writing down several experiences each day that went well because of others may make these positive events more visible to you and more memorable by the end of the day − thus, boosting gratitude and its accompanying benefits.

While the negative news − “The stock market is down again!” “How are tariffs going to affect my financial security?” − is clearly drawing attention, a gratitude list is meant to help highlight the positive so that it doesn’t go overlooked.

The negative doesn’t need help gaining attention, but the positive might.

A second method for practicing gratitude is expressing that gratitude to others. This can look like writing a letter of gratitude and delivering it to someone who has made a positive impact in your life.

When my students do this exercise, it often results in touching interactions. For instance, my college students often write to high school mentors, and those adults are regularly moved to tears to learn of the positive impact they had. Expressing gratitude in work settings can boost employees’ sense of social worth.

In a world that may currently feel bleak, a letter of gratitude may not only help the writer recognize the good of others but also let others know that they are making a beautiful difference in the world.

The Conversation

Monica Y. Bartlett does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organization that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

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Q. What is gratitude, according to the author?
A. Gratitude is experienced as a positive emotion that results from noticing others’ care or value, such as kindnesses, friendship, or financial support.

Q. Why do we struggle with noticing gratitude in stressful times?
A. We struggle because negative information captures our attention more readily than positive information due to the negativity bias, an evolutionary adaptation that prioritizes vigilance for life’s harms over noticing the good.

Q. What are two simple ways to practice gratitude during stressful times?
A. Two simple ways to practice gratitude are (1) keeping a daily list of experiences where others have brought positivity into your life and (2) expressing gratitude to others, such as writing a letter or delivering it in person.

Q. How can practicing gratitude help counteract the negativity bias?
A. Practicing gratitude helps us notice and remember the good that others are doing for us every day, which can counteract the negativity bias by shifting our focus away from negative information.

Q. Can anyone naturally be more grateful than others?
A. Research suggests that some people may be naturally more grateful than others, but it’s also clear that gratitude can be cultivated through practice and habit-building.

Q. What is a daily list of experiences where others have brought positivity into your life?
A. A daily list is a simple way to create a habit of scanning your day for positive outcomes that others have brought into your life, no matter how small they may seem.

Q. How can expressing gratitude to others boost employees’ sense of social worth?
A. Expressing gratitude in work settings can boost employees’ sense of social worth by making them feel valued and appreciated, leading to increased job satisfaction and well-being.

Q. What is the author’s perspective on journaling as a way to practice gratitude?
A. The author suggests that if journaling feels daunting or annoying, it’s okay to call it a daily list instead, which can be a more accessible and effective way to cultivate gratitude.

Q. How can practicing gratitude lower depression?
A. Research has consistently shown that practicing gratitude can lower depression by increasing well-being, happiness, and relationship satisfaction.

Q. What is the author’s expertise in relation to gratitude?
A. The author is a social psychologist with 18 years of research and teaching experience on gratitude, specifically focusing on resilience and human flourishing at Gonzaga University.