Out of Gratitude Happiness Grows

Dozens of times a day I'm reminded that happiness is a function of focus. Walking down the street I can choose to focus upon the cigarette butts and fast food wrappers in the gutter or the endless, azure blue sky above. Talking with the person next to me in line at the coffee shop I can focus upon their whiney, negative tone or upon the slice of Spirit than shines surreptitiously within them.

Happiness is all about choices. And that's where gratitude comes in. We have so friggin' much to be grateful for that most of the time, we forget to be grateful at all! We take it all for granted. I recently received an email from a friend who about a year ago moved to Australia. She was all excited because the house they've just rented, unlike the house they had been living in for the last year, has central heat, air conditioning, a washer & dryer, and plenty of hot water. The things that many of us just assume our lives will always contain are the very things for which others feel profound gratitude. 

Though gratitude as an emotion is always felt in the now, the mental focus that produces gratitude, and thus happiness, can be upon the past, present or future. So, let's look at each of these chronological arenas to see how we can harvest gratitude across the full spectrum of time.

1) Past. Close your eyes and take a minute to think about all the people, places and things in your past that you are truly grateful for. Yes, I mean really do that right now. Don't keep reading -- do the damn exercise! Thank you.

Your past is a veritable gold mine of gratitude. Family, friends, teachers, authors, artists, musicians -- all kinds of people have played important roles in your life and have helped you become who you are today. As Margaret Visser writes in her new book The Gift of Thanks: Roots and Rituals of Gratitude, "Gratitude is always about paying attention, deliberately beholding and appreciating the other." Remembering them on a regular basis will not only increase your happiness, but also encourage you to show some of that same kindness to others, thus producing an across-time, happiness ripple effect. 

One other thing you can do with past gratitude. Take time to thank those "past people" who still fill your heart with gratitude today. If they're still alive, send them a note or a letter. No, not an email, and surely not a truncated, little text. Actually write out your thanks in your own handwriting (you know "cursive," like you learned in second grade) and mail it to them. If they're already dead just send them a silent prayer or message of gratitude. The past may be gone, but the gratitude, and its impact upon your happiness, remains. All you've got to do is focus upon it.

2) Present. Look around. What do you currently have in your life that you're thankful for? People, places, things, opportunities, experiences -- the list is endless. And yet, most days, thanks and gratitude is the furthest thing from our minds. A huge part of gratitude is just noticing. Standing in the hot shower after my morning walk, the thought spontaneously erupted, "Damn, I like showers!" Small things, little things, forgotten things, and nearly invisible things, are all things to which we are unconsciously grateful.

Here's another simple exercise that will build your gratitude muscles and make you happier. Each day think of five things you're grateful for. And be creative. Don't say your dog and beer everyday! Five things that warm your heart or bring a smile to your face that are in your life today. Don't have five things? Time to change your life!

The point is so obvious I'm almost embarrassed to belabor it -- each and everyday our lives are filled with an incredible richness of things about which we can be thankful. Want to be happier? Focus upon those things.

3) Future. How can the future make you happier, it isn't even here yet? Enter the wonderful mental power of anticipation. Think about all the cool, fun, interesting and exciting things you're planning to do. Sure, you haven't done them yet, but just anticipating doing them gives you a nice underlying hum of happiness. Aren't you grateful for all these upcoming opportunities that await you?

One of the most interesting things about anticipation is that so many times we get more happiness from anticipating an event than we do from the event itself. We can get through many a boring day at work anticipating the fun of the upcoming holidays. But then when the holidays arrive and we are stuck for days eating too much, arguing too much, and watching way too much sports with our crazy, dysfunctional family, the stark, cold reality sets in! By the time New Years rolls around, we're starting to believe the old adage that your friends are God's way of apologizing for your family!

Gratitude is a simple thing. So simple that it gets covered over by the busyness and chaos of our lives.  Want to experience the maximum of happiness in your life? Focus upon all you have to be grateful for in each of these three arenas -- your past, your present, and your future. Fill your head, your heart, your day with thoughts of gratitude. Thanksgiving is just around the proverbial corner. Why wait? Start being thankful today. 



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