KEEPING A GRATITUDE JOURNAL (from the Greater Good website)
One of the most popular practices to capture the great social, psychological, and physical health benefits that come from giving thanks is to keep a âgratitude journal.â
Studies have traced a range of impressive benefits to the simple act of writing down the things for which weâre gratefulâbenefits including better sleep, fewer symptoms of illness, and more happiness among adults and kids alike. Greater Good have also developed a own digital gratitude journal, Thnx4.org.
The basic practice is pretty straightforward; people are simply instructed to record five things they experienced in the past week for which theyâre grateful. The entries are supposed to be briefâjust a single sentenceâand they range from the mundane (âwaking up this morningâ) to the sublime (âthe generosity of friendsâ) to the timeless (âthe Rolling Stonesâ).
But when you dig into the research, you find that gratitude journals donât always workâsome studies show incredible benefits, others not so much.
To understand why, Greater Good consulted with Robert Emmons, arguably the worldâs leading expert on the science of gratitude and an author of some of the seminal studies of gratitude journals.
Emmons, a professor at the University of California, Davis, shared these research-based tips for reaping the greatest psychological rewards from your gratitude journal.
âĸ Donât just go through the motions. Research by psychologist Sonja Lyubomirsky and others suggests that journaling is more effective if you first make the conscious decision to become happier and more grateful. âMotivation to become happier plays a role in the efficacy of journaling,â says Emmons.
âĸ Go for depth over breadth. Elaborating in detail about a particular thing for which youâre grateful carries more benefits than a superficial list of many things.
âĸ Get personal. Focusing on people to whom you are grateful has more of an impact than focusing on things for which you are grateful.
âĸ Try subtraction, not just addition. One effective way of stimulating gratitude is to reflect on what your life would be like without certain blessings, rather than just tallying up all those good things.
âĸ Savour surprises. Try to record events that were unexpected or surprising, as these tend to elicit stronger levels of gratitude.
âĸ Donât overdo it. Writing occasionally (once or twice per week) is more beneficial than daily journaling. In fact, one study by Lyubomirsky and her colleagues found that people who wrote in their gratitude journals once a week for six weeks reported boosts in happiness afterward; people who wrote three times per week didnât. âWe adapt to positive events quickly, especially if we constantly focus on them,â says Emmons. âIt seems counterintuitive, but it is how the mind works.â
Learn more about gratitude journals by participating in the GGSC’s online, shareable gratitude journal, Thnx4.
The Gratitude Journal process is about forcing ourselves to pay attention to the good things in life weâd otherwise take for granted. Perhaps thatâs why the benefits seem to diminish when you start writing more than once per week, and why surprises induce stronger feelings of gratitude: Itâs easy to get numb to the regular sources of goodness in our lives.
Indeed, Emmons told Greater Good that when people start keeping a gratitude journal, he recommends that they see each item they list in their journal as a giftâin fact, he suggests that they âmake the conscious effort to associate it with the word âgift.ââ Here are the exact instructions he gives participants in his studies:
Be aware of your feelings and how you ârelishâ and âsavorâ this gift in your imagination. Take the time to be especially aware of the depth of your gratitude.
âIn other words,â he says, âwe tell them not to hurry through this exercise as if it were just another item on your to-do list. This way, gratitude journaling is really different from merely listing a bunch of pleasant things in oneâs life.â
So why might this particular practice do such good for our minds and bodies? Emmons points to research showing that translating thoughts into concrete languageâwhether oral or writtenâhas advantages over just thinking the thoughts: It makes us more aware of them, deepening their emotional impact.
More on Gratitude
Learn 10 ways to become more grateful.
Take this gratitude quiz to learn how grateful you are.
Read more about the research-proven benefits of gratitude.
Contribute to our “community gratitude journal.”
Watch this video on teaching kids gratitude.
âWriting helps to organize thoughts, facilitate integration, and helps you accept your own experiences and put them in context,â he says. âIn essence, it allows you to see the meaning of events going on around you and create meaning in your own life.â
Though he does have suggestions for how to keep a gratitude journal, Emmons also stresses that âthere is no one right way to do it.â Thereâs no evidence that journaling at the start of the day is any more effective than journaling before you go to bed, for instance. And aesthetics really donât matter.
âYou donât need to buy a fancy personal journal to record your entries in, or worry about spelling or grammar,â says Emmons. âThe important thing is to establish the habit of paying attention to gratitude-inspiring events.â
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