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Martin Seligman on "The Gratitude Visit"

  • Writer: meagainsthewords
    meagainsthewords
  • Aug 22, 2015
  • 2 min read

"...Gratitude can make your life happier and more satisfying. When we feel gratitude, we benefit from the pleasant memory of a positive event in our life. Also, when we express our gratitude to others, we strengthen our relationship with them. But sometimes our thank you is said so casually or quickly that it is nearly meaningless. In this exercise … you will have the opportunity to experience what it is like to express your gratitude in a thoughtful, purposeful manner.


Your task is to write a letter of gratitude to this individual and deliver it in person. The letter should be concrete and about three hundred words: be specific about what she did for you and how it affected your life. Let her know what you are doing now, and mention how you often remember what she did. Make it sing! Once you have written the testimonial, call the person and tell her you’d like to visit her, but be vague about the purpose of the meeting; this exercise is much more fun when it is a surprise. When you meet her, take your time reading your letter."


He contextualizes the value of this exercise amidst our worry-culture and age of anxiety:


"We think too much about what goes wrong and not enough about what goes right in our lives. Of course, sometimes it makes sense to analyze bad events so that we can learn from them and avoid them in the future. However, people tend to spend more time thinking about what is bad in life than is helpful. Worse, this focus on negative events sets us up for anxiety and depression. One way to keep this from happening is to get better at thinking about and savoring what went well.


For sound evolutionary reasons, most of us are not nearly as good at dwelling on good events as we are at analyzing bad events. Those of our ancestors who spent a lot of time basking in the sunshine of good events, when they should have been preparing for disaster, did not survive the Ice Age. So to overcome our brains’ natural catastrophic bent, we need to work on and practice this skill of thinking about what went well."



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Comments


We often have some thoughts in everyday of our lives. It might be thought of your favorite food, thought of music or movie that you like, thoughts about your work, passion, love, friendship, travelling, hobby and other activities. Whatever it is, always keep your thoughts positive. If they are challenging or caused negativity, let them pass like clouds in the sky. Every emotion and feeling is a result of what are you thinking of. Always be true to it!

 

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KEEP YOUR THOUGHTS POSITIVE

BECAUSE YOUR THOUGHTS BECOME YOUR WORDS

 

KEEP YOUR WORDS POSITIVE

BECAUSE YOUR WORDS BECOME YOUR BEHAVIOR

 

KEEP YOUR BEHAVIOR POSITIVE

BECAUSE YOUR BEHAVIOR BECOME YOUR HABITS

 

KEEP YOUR HABITS POSITIVE

BECAUSE YOUR HABITS

BECOME YOUR VALUES 

 

KEEP YOUR VALUES POSITIVE

BECAUSE YOUR VALUES BECOME YOUR DESTINY

 

MAHATMA GANDHI

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