With Thanksgiving coming later this week, it seemed appropriate to take gratitude as the theme for this post. As readers of Get Out of My Head will know, a mindset of gratitude is something that is in our control, and it is also something that has psychological and physical benefits for us when we employ it.
And yet, for all the positivity that comes to us when we express gratitude to others, more recent studies have shown that to derive the greatest impact from a gratitude practice it is more important to receive than to give. There are all sorts of levels of irony that could be unpacked in this, but I will leave that for another time. For now, I will just point out that the results of the study demonstrated that the benefits from the expression of gratitude were far more potent for the receiver than the giver of said gratitude.
Recognizing we can’t always expect others to shower us with gratitude each day, what exactly are we supposed to take from the above? For me there are a couple of things.
The first takeaway is that very similar positive benefits from the expression of gratitude were found to accrue to people who were able to watch videos of others expressing gratitude. It is important to note this gratitude was not expressed to the study participant who was watching it. Instead, the participants were watching videos of strangers expressing gratitude to and about other strangers. Still, in watching and listening to these stories of thankfulness, the “gratitude circuitry” in the subjects’ brains turned on, giving them these potent benefits of gratitude. Thus, to cultivate a gratitude practice that taps into these benefits, seemingly all you would need to do is watch YouTube videos of people expressing gratitude. If you are going to spend time online anyway, why not try it?
A second takeaway is that we don’t necessarily have to depend on other people’s stories to activate our gratitude brain circuitry. Maybe it is infrequent, maybe we gloss over it, maybe we aren’t great at appreciating it in the moment, but throughout our lives each of us has received gratitude at times. Knowing the results of the above studies, I have personally adapted my own gratitude practice to include writing out by hand very detailed stories of times when I received gratitude. I paint the picture of my surroundings, of the context of that day and time. I write about how I was feeling and what I was thinking. I give specifics on who the person expressing gratitude to me was, why they were expressing the gratitude, and how it made me feel in the moment. Then I reflect on my larger takeaways from that experience. I don’t write these stories every day, but if I have a new one, I make sure to capture it. On days where I am not writing a new story, I often go back and reread one I previously wrote. It helps me relive that moment of receiving gratitude all over again, and for that I am grateful.
My third, and perhaps the most important takeaway is that while the greatest benefits of a gratitude practice come from receiving the gratitude yourself, or watching someone else receive it, the science still demonstrates that there are benefits to expressing gratitude as well. For me, given that I know the benefits I receive as well as the greater benefits the recipient will receive, this means that regardless of the first two takeaways above I have done nothing to slow my expression of gratitude to others. I make sure I write handwritten thank you cards. I make sure to tell people how and why I appreciate them and what they did. I make sure I cultivate a grateful mind and express that gratitude proactively.
A recent example came when our team had an internal poll asking about the best mentor each of us ever had. I wrote up my answer to share with the team, and then made sure to reach out and share that with the mentor I wrote about. This was someone with whom I had not been in contact for ten years, but who had an incredibly positive impact on my professional development, and I wanted to make sure he heard that gratitude from me.
All of this to say, we now know how beneficial it is to receive gratitude. While we can’t control what expressions of gratitude we receive, we can control the gratitude we express. Knowing how much it positively impacts the receiver let’s all work to get more gratitude out into the world. Some of it might come back our way, and for that we should all be grateful.