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Gratefulness
Many of us live in a state of anxiety as we try to manage the constant flow of demands and distractions that characterize our fast-paced world. Sometimes I can hardly breathe I feel so overwhelmed by what’s ahead of me in my day and wonder how I am ever going to tick off the ever-growing list of tasks. However, I am noticing more and more how much a greater attention to gratitude can alleviate stress and give one a sense of joy in the midst of busyness.
As I explored in my previous blog, A State of Preparedness: Preparing our being with gratitude if we reflect on what we are grateful for before we embark on a task – for example, before sitting down at the computer, before going shopping, before studying or teaching, before a meeting – there is a qualitative difference in the level of presence, or what I call ‘awakeness’ that we bring to that task.
When we approach our day or task with gratitude we have more capacity to be in a grateful state while doing the task itself.
If we focus on an innermost attitude of gratitude as the way to approach what we are about to do, then this becomes more important than the task itself, which in turn takes the pressure off.
When we approach our day or task with gratitude we have more capacity to be in a grateful state while doing the task itself. I love what Brother David Steindl-Rast teaches us in his stunningly beautiful video A Good Day, when he says, “You think this is just another day in your life? It’s not just another day. It’s the one day that is given to you today. It’s given to you. It’s a gift. It’s the only gift you have right now, and the only appropriate response is gratefulness”.
If we bring this awareness to what we are doing, we are more likely to turn our sense of being burdened by what we have to do into a state of feeling that we are allowed to do these things, that everything is a gift. As Brother Steindl-Rast says: “Begin by opening your eyes and be surprised that you have eyes that you can open.”
We need to be ever-conscious of moving from being ‘grateful for’ towards being ‘grateful to’.
Deep gratitude is not just about feeling grateful for what we are given or the blessings in our lives, it’s also acting on this and giving back to others out of acknowledgement. We need to be ever-conscious of moving from being ‘grateful for’ towards being ‘grateful to’. In this way, gratitude gives us greater awareness of our interconnectedness with others, and brings greater color and depth to our day.
When we are grateful we tend to give greater importance to our relationships, so we are not over-identifying with what we are doing, but rather being more aware of the people around us who are enriching us with what they have to give. When we acknowledge this in them we can often “make their day” by affirming their value for who they are, not just what they do. What I call the ‘beneficent circle of gratitude’ is turning around and around and detracting from the circle of busyness.
This gives us the opportunity to honor this as a gift rather than something we needed to tick off a list.
How we reflect at the end of the day can also have a big impact on our sense of feeling overwhelmed. If we write down just some things that we are grateful for, we bring to the fore all that we were allowed to achieve that day and this gives us the opportunity to honour this as a gift rather than something we needed to tick off a list. We can treasure it, take joy from it and this can nourish us for a contented night’s sleep.
Our stress and anxiety can be reduced by the joy that our gratitude evokes. This joy opens us up to even more gratitude and our world moves from a busy list of things to do to a circle of giving and receiving.
Dr Kerry Howells is a teacher, educator and academic at the University of Tasmania, Australia. She has been researching the role that gratitude plays in enhancing teaching and learning over the past two decades, and has published several academic papers that report on her findings in the areas of school leadership and teaching, pre-service teacher education, indigenous education, and academic learning. Kerry’s book, Gratitude in Education: A Radical View is the first full text to be written on this topic, and has been hailed by reviewers around the world as “ground-breaking”. Read the introduction to her book here.
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I am grateful and mindful and thankful for my living over 50 years and every one and everything that has blessed my life along the way.
I am grateful for my whole life. I am grateful for my family, my friends, my church fellowship, my food, my income, my God career, my faith, my conversations, my emotions, my love and romance, my lovemaking, my creativity my artistry and my choices in life, through Almighy God in Jesus Christ, Amen.
II'm trying to approach my tasks in gratefulness. for instance: at work it can happens that I have to check the food distribution in 3 schools, at the same time, even tasting the menu and taking a sample for microbiological analysis. It is difficult because I have to run... at the beginning of this task, I felt overwhelmed. Then I adopted the approach of gratitude, because I noticed some nice operators and the way they cope with children, then i was completely engaged in observing children and...
II’m trying to approach my tasks in gratefulness. for instance: at work it can happens that I have to check the food distribution in 3 schools, at the same time, even tasting the menu and taking a sample for microbiological analysis. It is difficult because I have to run… at the beginning of this task, I felt overwhelmed. Then I adopted the approach of gratitude, because I noticed some nice operators and the way they cope with children, then i was completely engaged in observing children and teen agers, how they eat, how they laugh, how they come to me asking me for food, because they confuse me with the operators (i wear a white apron and a special hat). Now I enjoy it. Sometimes I laugh! Thank you Dr Kerry Howells for the scientific reasons you add to this matter. Anna
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