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Thursday 5 July 2012

Gratitude Journal Begins Again


I have decided to restart my gratitude journalying at the end of each day. This is a practice i used to be quite disciplined at but as the days go along & children, work, relationships, health & home need to be given more attention, some of the simple pleasures get dropped off somewhere along the road of life....
As many on the gratitude path might relate to -  my journey started when life was feeling a little more difficult than i was comfortable with - aka - basically I wasn't getting what I wanted and was having a nice little 3 year old internal tantrum about it. I wanted a quick fix and The "Attractor Factor" aspect of gratitude seemed like a sweet & easy pill to swallow at the time...

You know what i discovered - It actually worked!

Maybe not in the sense of a sudden mansion on top of a coastal headland,  a perfectly behaved child or a 100% cooperative partner following my every whim. But in a much bigger, more fulfilling way, I became grateful and appreciative for the positive's that already existed in my life. My focus shifted from what was not working to what was ~ suddenly life seemed better than it had for a long time ~ Suddenly i felt happy & light again :)

I know, i know, you've read this "gratitude smatitude" theory every second week in your latest magazine, face book page with those incessant image quote's, favorite book store & blogs etc etc....
But have you made time to actually do it on a regular & consistant basis??

Go on..... Just Do It.... I am too


what have you got to loose except 5 minutes and a negative mindset ~ You may even like to stretch out that 5 minutes to 15 with a hot cupa or glass of wine in a quiet cozey corner or garden hideaway. Call it self therapy & Tell your family it'll help you complain less, smile more & love better... They might even give you half an hour :)
 This time I am adding a twist ~ Now that my son in 4 and able to clearly understand and articulate  what makes him happy in a day, I am instigating a new family tradition...
 "The Family Gratitude Book"
I am thinking maybe sometime around dinner we will gather together and share what we are happy / grateful for in our day... A treasure in the years to come i am sure!
 
 What twist will your Gratitude Journal Journey take???
 
The Why & How of Gratitude Journal's
Sourced from:"SimpleAbundance.com" 
There are several tools that I'm going to suggest you use as you begin your inner exploration. While all of them will help you become happier and more content and will nurture your creativity, this first tool could change the quality of your life beyond belief: it's what I call a daily gratitude journal. I have a beautiful blank book and each night before I go to bed, I write down five things that I can be grateful about that day. Some days my list will be filled with amazing things, most days just simple joys. 

Other days--rough ones--I might think tht I don't have five things to be grateful for, so I'll write down my basics: my health, my husband and daughter, their health, my animals, my home, my friends, and the comfortable bed that I'm about to get into, as well as the fact that the day's over. That's okay. Real life isn't always going to be perfect or go our way, but the recurring acknowledgment of what is working in our lives can help us not only survive, but surmount our difficulties. 

The gratitude journal has to be the first step on the Simple Abundance path or it just won't work for you. Simplicity, order, harmony, beauty, and joy--all the other principles that can transform your life will not blossom and flourish without gratitude. It you want to travel this journey with me, the gratitude journal is not an option.
Why? Because you simply will not be the same person two months from now after consciously giving thanks each day for the abundance that exists in your life. And you have set in motion an ancient spiritual law; the more you have and are grateful for, the more will be given you.
I have told you that the Simple Abundance path is a transformative process. We're going to work on one principle for one month (online) at a time, trying to weave that principle into the fabric of our daily life. 

Let's begin today with gratitude. Select the prettiest, most inviting blank book you can find for your gratitude journal. Make a pleasant outing for its selection. Note the fabric or design of the cover. The look and feel of the paper. Do you prefer ruled pages or blank? As an online member, you have access to a computerized page to complete each day. Perhaps you can find a book with a ribbon clasp. One of the most valuable lessons Simple Abundance has taught me is that it is in the smallest details that the flavor of life is savored. 

As the months pass and you fill your journal with blessings, an inner shift in your reality will occur. Soon you will be delighted to discover how content and hopeful you are feeling. As you focus on the abundance rather than on the lack in your life, you will be designing a wonderful new blueprint for the future. This sense of fulfillment is gratitude at work, transforming your dreams into reality.
A French proverb reminds us that "Gratitude is the heart's memory." Begin this day to explore and integrate this beautiful, life-affirming principle into your life, and the miracle you have been seeking will unfold to your wonder and amazement. 


Study on gratitude
By "Mind Body Advisor : http://www.rodale.com/gratitude-and-happiness
"Many people today are struggling to make do with less. What’s the secret to finding happiness when you’re coping with loss? If we observe people who know how to be happy, we find that they make a point of being grateful for whatever they have. And it’s not related to how much material wealth you may or may not possess. A growing body of research has demonstrated that grateful people are happier than their less-grateful counterparts, regardless of their income level.

THE DETAILS: Gratitude has also been found to be a powerful antidote to depression. Martin Seligman, PhD, a pioneer in the positive psychology movement, and colleagues at University of Pennsylvania delivered gratitude instructions to 50 severely depressed visitors to a self-help website. They recommended that individuals take time each day to write down three things that went well that day, and why they thought so. Fifteen days later, 94 percent of the 50 individuals reported feeling significantly less depressed. Their scores on a widely used depression inventory dropped by 50 percent—equivalent to improvement seen with medication treatment or psychotherapy, although the latter interventions generally take longer to work. Individuals in a placebo-controlled group who wrote down three childhood memories each day did not experience an improvement in their depressive symptoms. More important, the effects for the group practicing gratitude lasted for a full 6 months. The researchers repeated the same study several months later with a different group of depressed Web users and obtained substantially the same results. Seligman’s group also found that writing in a gratitude journal had a mood-boosting effect for depressed patients in a 12-week therapy group, as well as for patients in individual therapy.

WHAT IT MEANS: Cultivating gratitude is a powerful way to overcome adversity and depression. By choosing to focus on your blessings, rather than ruminating on your disappointments and deficits, you nourish positive feelings about yourself, your life, and others. As an ongoing attitude, gratitude will help you cultivate happiness throughout your life. It is no accident that the individuals in Seligman’s study maintained their gains long after they completed the online intervention. Gratitude is habit-forming. The number of things you can be grateful for is infinite. As a happiness resource, gratitude is free and inexhaustible.

There are many ways you can weave gratitude into the fabric of your life:

• Keep a gratitude journal. At the end of each day, write down three things you experienced that you feel grateful for. They could be as varied as the buds appearing on the trees in your yard and appreciation for the kindness extended to you by a stranger. As you chronicle the things you feel grateful for, make a point of not repeating any of the prior entries in your journal.
• Write and deliver a gratitude letter to someone in your life whom you have not properly thanked for what they have given to you. You can deliver the letter in person or read it over the telephone. It’s a powerful experience, for you as well as for the person you’re thanking.
• Say grace before each meal to express your thanks for the food you are about to eat.
Use whatever language you’re comfortable with, whether religious, spiritual, or just an informal expression of gratitude for the meal.
• Make a point of thanking anyone who serves you in any way—the cashier at the checkout counter, your child for clearing the dinner table, the tech-support person who helped you fix your computer.
• Take gratitude breaks during the course of each day to simply appreciate the myriad blessings, large and small, that are present in your life."

Be Grateful, Be Happy, Be Well,
Rachael :)