What do you want most out of life? To be happier? Healthier? More successful? Improve your relationships?

No matter what your goal, there is one thing you can do to improve the likelihood of succeeding.

Begin with gratitude

Research has repeatedly confirmed that acts of gratitude, such as counting your blessings, showing appreciation and helping others, can result in more happiness and better health. In one study, participants who kept a weekly gratitude journal were more optimistic and healthier after 10 weeks than a comparison group that recorded things that irritated or displeased them.

It also turns out that a grateful heart is a healthy heart. In another study, a group of people with heart disease were asked about their feelings of gratitude. Those who felt more gratitude were less depressed, slept better and had more energy. And after keeping a gratitude journal for 40 days, the participants also showed reduced inflammation (a key risk factor in heart disease) and improved heart rhythms.

Because gratitude can reduce feelings of stress, it also could improve resistance to cancer and increase immunity.

But the benefits of gratitude multiply when it becomes more than just a feeling. People who take the time to show gratitude with words and actions can spread the positive effects to others.

Finding the path to gratitude, however, isn’t always easy. Sometimes we are locked into habitual patterns that cause us to dwell on the negative and overlook all the good things in our lives.

Incorporate gratitude into your life by taking these four approaches:

Feel it

Pause and think about what you’re grateful for. It might be as basic as food on the table and a roof over your head. It might be the past hour, day, week that’s been peaceful and trouble free. It might be the friends and family who love you. Don’t overlook the mundane and the obvious. Feel gratitude for all that is right in your world.

Record it

Now write it down. Nothing is too big or too small. And nothing can be repeated too often. Taking a moment to remember and record your blessings actively reminds you of their importance. Try to do this daily so that you begin each day with a feeling of gratitude.

Express it

Don’t keep all that gratitude goodness to yourself. Feeling grateful for your friends and family? Tell them. It doesn’t have to be a big deal. A simple “Thanks for all the love and support. I really appreciate it,” works fine. Discover how good it feels to say thank you out loud for gifts or favors, or tell co-workers and service people how much you appreciate their hard work.

Act on it

Maybe the biggest benefits of gratitude occur when you pass it on. People who donate time and money, regularly do good deeds for others and make gratitude a habit as well as a feeling, not only boost their good feelings but make the world a better place for everyone else too.


Originally published at www.aplanforliving.com on January 9, 2016.


Image courtesy of Rosan Harmens/Unsplash

Originally published at medium.com