Gratitude can be more complicated than you think

Thanksgiving is upon us, and messages about gratitude are everywhere.

If you’ve read my book, you know I devoted an entire chapter to gratitude. In my experience, bringing a focus to gratitude each day has powerfully supported me to live big, and I believe a regular gratitude practice can do that for everyone.

I could have stopped there, but I have continued to think and learn a lot about gratitude since I published my book.

I invite you to consider an aspect of gratitude, and a question, that I had not thought about until recently, when it was brought to my attention.

What are you grateful for?

It’s likely that you will think that answers to this questions are obvious.

When you ask most people, you often hear, “family” and “health” and things such as fresh food, safety, security, peace, and love.

All of these are wonderful. So are things like feeling gratitude for doing work you love, or for a friendship, or for a gift you received, or for an outcome in an election, or for good weather on a day you have to travel.

I am a big proponent of paying attention to small moments for which you feel grateful — such as the person who gave up a seat for you on a crowded bus, or a smile from a stranger that lifted your spirits, or spotting a surprising glimpse of beautiful color on a dreary day.

The thing I had not ever considered was the suggestion to feel grateful for everything — even things that did not go well, or were hard, or are currently difficult.

Can you bless it all?

You may be thinking, “What a crazy concept!” You might also ask the question, “Why would I want to feel grateful for things I did not want to happen, or do not like?”

I get it. It’s taken me some time to process this idea.

And, I also know that there have been events in my life that, while far from desirable, and some that were absolutely painful (things I would not wish on anyone) that have taught me something meaningful.

Things like that have made me stronger.

Things like that have provided insights and lessons that have made me the particular person I am today, and I truly appreciate them.

That is why the suggestion is to bless it all, to bless all of the harvest.

Bless the lovely fruit and bless the fruit that has been rotten.

Even when you do not yet know the ways you can feel grateful for the pain or disappointment or loss, history shows us that in time, it will all contribute to growth. It is all here, and all happening, for us.

Thus we can bless it.

Wishing you a wonderful holiday

May your Thanksgiving be filled with love and joy — and with gratitude for everything in your life.