A Simple Weekly Mindfulness Practice: Keep a Gratitude Journal

A Simple Weekly Mindfulness Practice: Keep a Gratitude Journal


 
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Writing helps to organize thoughts, facilitate integration, and helps you accept your own experiences and put them in context, it allows you to see the meaning of events going on around you and create meaning in your own life.

There’s no wrong way to keep a gratitude journal, but here are some general instructions as you get started.

Write down up to five things for which you feel grateful. The physical record is important—don’t just do this exercise in your head. The things you list can be relatively small in importance (“The tasty sandwich I had for lunch today.”) or relatively large (“My sister gave birth to a healthy baby boy.”). The goal of the exercise is to remember a good event, experience, person, or thing in your life—then enjoy the good emotions that come with it.

 

As you write, here are nine important tips:

 
  1. Be as specific as possible

    —specificity is key to fostering gratitude. “I’m grateful that my co-workers brought me soup when I was sick on Tuesday” will be more effective than “I’m grateful for my co-workers.”

  2. Go for depth over breadth.

    Elaborating in detail about a particular person or thing for which you’re grateful carries more benefits than a superficial list of many things.

  3. Get personal.

    Focusing on people to whom you are grateful has more of an impact than focusing on things for which you are grateful.

  4. Try subtraction, not just addition.

    Consider what your life would be like without certain people or things, rather than just tallying up all the good stuff. Be grateful for the negative outcomes you avoided, escaped, prevented, or turned into something positive—try not to take that good fortune for granted.

  5. See good things as “gifts.”

    Thinking of the good things in your life as gifts guards against taking them for granted. Try to relish and savor the gifts you’ve received.

  6. Savor surprises.

    Try to record events that were unexpected or surprising, as these tend to elicit stronger levels of gratitude.

  7. Revise if you repeat.

    Writing about some of the same people and things is OK, but zero in on a different aspect in detail.

  8. Write regularly.

    Whether you write every other day or once a week, commit to a regular time to journal, then honor that commitment.

  9. Don’t overdo it. Evidence suggests writing occasionally

    (1-3 times per week) is more beneficial than daily journaling. That might be because we adapt to positive events and can soon become numb to them—that’s why it helps to savor surprises.

 

Time Required

15 minutes per day, at least once per week for at least two weeks. Studies suggest that writing in a gratitude journal three times per week might actually have a greater impact on our happiness than journaling every day.

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Reference:

https://ggia.berkeley.edu/practice/gratitude_journal