Episode: 346
How to Use Gratitude to Feel Happier & Improve Your Relationships
a Solo Episode
Learn the gratitude practices that help you feel happier and more connected to your loved ones
If you’ve been thinking, I’m tired of being stressed all the time… I wish I could enjoy my life more… I know I should feel grateful, but I just don’t – this episode is for you.
Today, Mel breaks down the real science of gratitude: how it rewires your brain, resets your nervous system, and helps you feel less anxious and more connected to what’s already good in your life.
And these tools?
They’re simple enough to try with your partner.
They’re powerful enough to shift the tone in your home.
And they’re easy enough to send in your favorite group text.
If your days feel heavy, your mind won’t shut off, or joy feels out of reach, this episode will give you a reset.
By the end, you’ll have 3 powerful practices you can use today – for yourself, with your family, or with the people you care about most – to feel lighter, more present, and more in control in a very surprising way.
You can become any person you want to be, once you understand how to change your habits.
Mel Robbins
All Clips
Transcript
Mel Robbins (00:00):
The world feels so dark and so negative. Make no mistake, the world is reprogramming your mind right now. The power of gratitude is your way to fight back and to regain control of your mind and of how you feel in your day-to-day life. Gratitude is an act of defiance in a world that's trying to gaslight you into thinking you have no power. It lifts you up, it builds you up, it changes your brain, it changes your body, it changes your stress response, it changes your outlook. Gratitude is how you intentionally rewire your mind. This is why you need to do this now because the simple truth about life is that what you focus on will expand. We need you and you need you to start to fight back. And gratitude is where we begin. So let's start with tool number one.
(00:59):
Hey, it's your friend Mel, and welcome to the Mel Robbins podcast. It's always such an honor to be together and to spend this time with you. And if you're a new listener or you're here because somebody shared this episode with you, I just wanted to take a moment and personally welcome you to the Mel Robbins podcast family. I'm so glad that you're here. I should probably say that I'm grateful that you're here. I know you don't have a lot of time, but you made the time to listen and I'm especially glad that you chose this episode because you need this and so do I.
Mel Robbins (01:28):
Today you and I are talking about the surprising power of gratitude and three tools that will change your mind and body. I'm talking, you're going to sleep better at night. The markers for stress and inflammation lower. There's such fascinating research here.
(01:45):
So it's not just even the settings in your mind. This has a shift from the top down on you at a biological level. I almost didn't want to talk about gratitude right now. And the reason why is because the world feels so dark and so negative and there's very real problems that you may be facing that people in your life may be facing and to try to say, oh, well just be grateful that seems like crazy naive until you stop and really look at what gratitude is. Gratitude is how you intentionally rewire your mind. And the cool thing about the tools that I'm going to give you is you already know how to do this. We're going to go through these three ways that you can take on gratitude as an intentional act to change the way that you feel and to change the way that your mind works.
(02:53):
But you don't need to do all three. I don't want you to do more. I just want to give you some options. Practical, easy to try options. You don't have to buy anything. I also love it that you can take what I'm about to share with you, start exactly where you are and begin to shift your mental state and how you experience your life in real time, even as you're listening to our conversation today or watching it here on YouTube. And what the research is going to show you is that it only takes a slight shift from what you're already doing, slight little mental adjustments to lead to noticeable benefits to your physical health, your mental health to your relationships. The power of gratitude is your way to fight back and to regain control of your mind and of how you feel in your day-to-day life.
(03:48):
And that's the first act of defiance. It's the first thing that you need to take control of because you may not even realize how much you've handed your brain and the way that you feel to the world outside you. And gratitude is the first step of how you're going to start to take your power back. And what I mean by that is you can take your power back by training yourself to choose what you want to notice throughout the day rather than mindlessly allowing the world outside of you to just pour a bunch of garbage into your brain. And this reminds me of a conversation I had before on this podcast with one of your favorite guests that we've ever had. She's a regular on the show. Dr. Aditi Nerurkar is a medical doctor, researcher, and world renowned expert in stress and public health. She's a lecturer at Harvard Medical School and was the medical director of Harvard Beth Israel's Deaconess Hospital's integrative medicine program where she practiced and developed this enormous clinical practice in stress management using evidence-based integrative approaches to help her patients feel better. She's also one of the 57 world-renowned experts that I spoke to and that is featured in the Let Them Theory book. I love her research on resetting your stress response, and she spoke on this show about how powerful intentional gratitude journaling can be for your brain. Check this out.
Dr. Aditi Nerurkar (05:23):
The reason gratitude is so important from a scientific perspective is because when you are doing a gratitude, daily gratitude practice, it takes 60 seconds. You are rewiring your brain because what you are doing, it's a scientific, again, a fancy scientific name called cognitive reframing. What you focus on grows. So Rick Hanson talks about this idea of when you're going through stress, he's a psychologist. In California, negative experiences become sticky in the brain like Velcro, you hold onto them because it's this feeling of survival and self preservation.
(05:56):
And so when you start practicing gratitude on an everyday basis, it's cognitive reframing. What you focus on grows. So you shift your perspective. So even if negative and positive are happening at the same rate, good and bad things are happening in your life. At the same rate, when you are feeling a sense of stress, you are focused primarily on the negative because you are thinking danger, danger, danger, right? Red alert. And so how do you decrease that stickiness of negative experiences in your brain when you're feeling a sense of stress by practicing gratitude? So the negative experiences may happen, but it slides off how does it happen through gratitude. So you write down those things every single day and studies have demonstrated that 30, 60 and 90 days there's improved mood, decreased stress and burnout, better sleep. There are so many benefits to what everyday gratitude practice. It also silences your inner critic because it dials down the volume of the amygdala in the background.
Mel Robbins (06:46):
So you're ready for tool number one because I think I've convinced you world get out of my brain.
Mel Robbins (06:53):
It's time to lock in the gratitude settings because I am tired of feeling negative. I call this the unsent letter. And basically what it is, is it's a letter that you are going to sit down and write to someone else that is not a love letter. It's a gratitude letter. And we're going to start here because there's really interesting research that blew me away and it's going to blow you away too. You don't have to send the letter because what happens when you write this letter, it's about somebody else. It's about what you're grateful for is it changes something inside you. And I wanted to start here because have you noticed that as the world around you and all of the pressure that you face right now at work and in life and with your family and in relationships as that builds and builds, have you noticed how you get irritated and stressed and mad at everyone around you that you start to let the headlines and just the negativity definitely not put you in a gratitude mood?
(07:58):
And so because that negativity and the way it's reprogramming your mind and making you discouraged and stressed out and overwhelmed, it makes you snap at people. It makes you mad at people, it makes you have a bad tone of voice with people. It makes you withdraw. I want to start here because even though I didn't want to do the unsent letter exercise, I sat down anyway and I forced myself to write a letter to my husband Chris. Again, not a love letter, a gratitude letter because it's so easy to be mad at people. Oh, they didn't do the dishes, they didn't do this. Why did they always do that?
(08:35):
But the moment I started writing about what Chris has done for me in this season of our life, something softened, it's like all that negativity and the pressure from the outside world was like visit it. And I didn't even give him the letter. What I experienced in writing the letter was more for me to help me recenter myself, to help me tap into what I value to help me be able to be in the moment and not so stressed out and taken it out on him all the time. And so I like to call this the unsent letter. And let me tell you about the research. So these researchers at Indiana University led by psychologists, Dr. Joel Wong, ran this randomized controlled trial with nearly 300 people, and these are 300 people who were in therapy and they split the people into three groups. So one of the groups, they just got therapy.
(09:36):
The second group did expressive journaling about stress. So they wrote all about their stress, and the third group wrote one gratitude letter a week. That's it. Okay, so one's in therapy, one is just talking and journaling about stress. The other just wrote one gratitude letter a week. That's it. Guess what happened? The group that wrote the one letter about gratitude a week showed significantly better mental health reductions and depression and anxiety, not just during the four week writing period, but 12 weeks later, this had an afterburner effect and they never even had to send the letters. So here's your first tool. Once a week, I want you to sit down and write a one page letter to someone you're grateful for. You don't even have to send it, just write it. Now, here's how I want you to do it. Be specific and you can answer these questions to help you get started.
(10:38):
What did they do? Why did it matter? How did it affect you? I'm going to say it again. What did they do? Why did it matter? How did it affect you? I love this so much because the people in your life, you're feeling just as beaten down and negative as you are, and you're probably because your mind is so programmed by the outside world and the stress that you're feeling, you don't notice all the good things. You just kind of pick up on the things that irritate you. It's so easy, isn't it, to get into this routine with people that you care about where you feel like roommates and you don't appreciate each other. Gratitude and the unsent letter, it's how you find your way back to each other. I've been doing this for a couple of weeks. I got to think about who this week's person is going to be, and I have the perfect person in mind.
(11:33):
In fact, she's sitting in this room, our amazing senior producer, Amy. She and I have produced this show together since we started it three years ago. She's probably going to kill me for saying this, but I want to write the unsent letter for Amy. In fact, I can just tell her because she's sitting here and this is the greatest thing about these tools. You can make 'em their own. You could actually write the letter and send it. You could be with somebody and you could share them this episode and in the text say, Hey, I just want you to know I'm grateful for X, Y, and Z, and this episode made me think of you. I think you'll love listening to it. I'm just grateful for our friendship. Here's the thing that I am so grateful about, Amy. She's constantly, and she may not even realize this, she steps in behind the scenes right when everybody needs it most.
(12:21):
We have this super collaborative process with all of our producers where they all work together and they're reviewing each other's work. Amy led that. You want to know what else Amy does? Amy texted me when my dad had back surgery. Amy's thinking about those kinds of things. She's also really fun. Amy is throwing a wear your pajamas to our house breakfast party. Who does that? Amy? How does it make me feel like I have a really fun friend that makes life fun and that's always thinking about how to make things better? I mean, she's the definition of a team player, the kind of person you need if you want to have a successful show. And if you want to have fun in life, this is just who she is and I've never forgotten it. It may not always be front of mind, but being able to write it down helps you remember all the ways someone as important as Amy comes through for you.
(13:14):
And it also helps you realize how important everyone is. Well, for me, just speaking for me, who works on this show, that's why this so powerful. I mean, you can get so caught up in day-to-day life. You can get so busy, you can get so stressed out and life can feel like such a pressure cooker that you don't even see the beautiful people around you. And I'll tell you something, if you actually take the time to write a letter like that and send it to somebody, do you know how much that's going to help somebody else? That's why this tool is so powerful. So let's go back to the Indiana University study. What happened to the folks in the study is that they shifted their mental framework to talking about changing the settings in our mind from the way we usually think over our lives, just scanning for threats and all the worry and anxiety and all the stuff that's not going wrong, and oh my God, oh my God, to intentionally seeking connection.
(14:14):
So here's what I'm going to ask you to do, and this is the way you implement the tool. Just pick one person. You may already have that person in mind right now and write one full page about why you're thankful for them. It doesn't have to be some fancy thing. Any piece of paper will do it. Or maybe you want to type it or maybe you want to text it, or maybe you want to send them this podcast episode, say, I was thinking about you, and then write it in the text and share this episode and tell them how grateful you are for them and why. What did they do? Why does that make you grateful? How did it make you feel? Just one full page on paper. Be specific. Write out the moment what it meant to you. Every detail you have. And remember, this doesn't need to be sent to the person.
(15:00):
That's why I call it the unsent letter. Just simply sitting down and writing it shifts something inside you and wires you for connection and makes you more present and appreciate what's right in front of you. And I'm going to leave it up to you to possibly take it one step further and send it. If you want to send it to 'em, it will absolutely brighten their day. But this is more about your perspective and it works wonders. I was absolutely shocked at how it shifted something so quickly inside me. And I was also a little sad, I'll be honest, because it makes you realize how often you're going through that sticky negative state where the world is seeped into you. But this letter and practicing intentional gratitude just removes all that gunk and gets your mind wired for connection and positivity again. And if you do this once a week and you write a letter once a week, oh my gosh, now you're going to have positive momentum.
(16:01):
Now there's no negative stickiness. All that cognitive reframing that Dr. Aditi was talking about, you're doing it. I love doing this on Sunday. It's a slower day for me than the rest of the days, but fit it in whenever you can. Maybe it's on a Friday or Saturday for you. Alright, well that brings me to,
Mel Robbins (16:19):
The second research back way that you can use gratitude to not only intentionally change the settings in your mind and wire you for connection and help you have all these positive things happen, but you won't believe This next study, this next study which researched something called The Three Minute Night Journal, it's going to really blow your mind about the physical benefits that you will experience by taking on this second tool. And before I get into the physical benefits, I don't know if this happens to you, but you know those nights when you can't sleep, you really can't sleep.
(16:55):
It's never because you're physically uncomfortable, right? Isn't it always? It's because your brain, it's racing. It's replaying something that you said worried about something that's coming up. You're beating yourself up for something that you forgot. And there's this pattern for myself, just speaking for myself personally, that I started to notice the nights I was most wired and awake and restless, where the nights where I hadn't slowed down at all during the day, it was like, go, go, go, go, go, go, go. Okay, try to get to sleep. No check-in, no pause, no moment of reflection. Just go until you collapse and then just expect your mind to magically shut off. And lo and behold, that's not how your brain works. So there's something that you can do that may feel a little silly at first, but it works. Keep a notebook by your bed and you want the notebook by your bed because then it's right there.
(17:48):
You don't even have to think about it. You've been going, going all day. And what's the notebook for simple? Every night when you climb into bed, even when you're tired, write down three small things from the day that you're grateful for. I'm not talking deep stuff, I'm talking your kids really made you laugh. Today, you found a great parking spot at the grocery store. Chris made me a cup of tea this morning without me even asking. It's just three minutes. But here's what it does. It pulls your focus out of the chaos and puts it on what's actually okay. And what happens when you do that small shift? Well, I'll tell you, it helps your mind settle. It helps your body exhale. And you know what? There's a lot of science that backs this up in a huge way. The first person that ever taught me about this type of practice was Dr. Daniel Amen.
(18:44):
Dr. Daniel Amen is a world renowned expert on the brain. He's got brain clinics all over the place, and he himself as a brain doctor and a neuroscientist, has a practice every single night when he climbs into bed of just looking backwards through the day and scanning his day and going, what went well? What went well? And it's a simple example of how to focus your mind on the things that you value, how to get what Dr. Aditi, remember she called it, the sticky negativity, all that stuff that can clinging to your brain on those go go go days. And then that stickiness of negativity keeps you up at night. We're just going to take the cognitive reframing zamboni of gratitude. We're going to wipe all that out by directing our mind to just reflect back on what went well. And this is something that I have done for a very long time, this intentional act of gratitude, and I can just scan the day.
(19:44):
I never, ever, ever go to bed without doing this. But how did I begin doing it? I began doing it by tool number two, and this is called the Three Minute Night Journal, and it comes from a study done by Dr. Laura Redwine and the University of California San Diego. And so let me tell you about this study because this is how I have cultivated this mindset in my life. And here's what they wanted to know in this study. Can keeping a gratitude journal truly change your body, not just your mood? Does it change your biologically? I think you are accepting the truth that it can change the settings in your mind, but what about your body? And the folks that they studied in this research were all experiencing early stage heart failure. Now, these are people who had heart muscle dysfunction but no symptoms yet, which makes them very high risk for progressing to serious heart disease.
(20:39):
And so here's what they did in the study, 70 participants were assigned to one of two groups, a gratitude journaling group that was asked to write about the things that they were grateful for most days of the week and just really reflect deeply. So you're talking to somebody that could be progressing to serious heart disease or sitting there in their bed every night just like you sit in your bed, they've got their journal and they're not going to write a list of generic items. They're going to reflect deeply on what they're grateful for. So that's one group. Then there was the control group that just got the standard care. They were never told to journal nothing. And at the start and end of an eight week period for both groups, they were tested for three things. They were tested for signs of stress. They were tested for inflammation in the body and heart rate variability.
(21:30):
Now, an important fact here is a lower heart rate variability is associated with higher risks of cardiovascular disease, metabolic disorders, and even mental health issues like depression and anxiety. Okay, so lower HRV not a good thing. Higher HRV generally correlates with better overall health and longevity. So you're probably wondering, okay, you got these two groups, they're both in bed at night. One is journaling deeply about gratitude, the other's doing nada. Lemme tell you what happened. The gratitude journaling group showed significant improvements compared to the group that didn't journal at all. They also noticed that the journaling group had better quality sleep, just like I said. Now, this was just 70 people, but the results were the results for a free and low effort tool. I mean, this is amazing, using your mind to create a better you all just from a journaling practice. Now, I want to bring one more angle to this because again, I'm offering tools.
(22:31):
I said in the beginning, you don't have to do all three. I want you to make them your own because the best tools are the ones that you actually use. So if keeping the writing journal next to your bed is not going to be your thing, if scanning at the end of the day is not your thing, I want to offer up
Mel Robbins (22:47):
One more way to train your mind for gratitude. And you can do this one first thing in the morning. And I absolutely love this. This one comes from Dr. Tara Swart Bieber, who said to me that her entire routine in the morning as a brain scientist and neuroscientist, she is incredible. Her whole routine from the moment her eyes open up is about practicing gratitude and not letting your brain kick in until you've settled yourself, your mind, and your body into gratitude. And I want you to really pay attention to her as she describes the details of how she wakes up so intentional. And then she's going to explain why this works and what it's doing in her brain just to how Dr. Tara wakes up.
Dr. Tara Swart Bieber (23:49):
As soon as I am aware that I'm awake, I snuggle my face against my silk pillowcase and I say, I love my silk pillowcase. And then I say, and I love my side sleeping pillow, and I love my wool mattress topper, and I love, I've created a bit of a haven in my bedroom. I'm grateful for my mattress, I'm grateful for my bedding. Usually that's the minimum. I might do the temperature in the room or how quiet it is. Then I just do some deep breathing in kind of every direction of my chest. It's a barrel. And just have a feel for if there's any areas of tension. Then to actually get out of bed. I start thinking about how much I'm going to save on my cup of tea, and then I go downstairs and I take my probiotic. I have to wait 10 minutes until I have my cup of tea. I do my oil pulling, and then I make my cup of English breakfast tea or matcha a complete ritual and sit and really savor it and enjoy it. And then I pick up my phone and look at my messages.
Mel Robbins (25:00):
How does this help you, and how does this help your brain?
Dr. Tara Swart Bieber (25:03):
There's a lot of scientific evidence for the benefits on your mental health and your health and your longevity of gratitude. So basically, I'm not letting my brain kick in. I'm, I'm going straight to the gratitude. So I can't even think about anything else.
Mel Robbins (25:20):
I just love listening to her. I mean, I don't know about you, but as I was listening to her, like, oh, she snuggled in her sheets, her pillow, and oh my God, as I'm thinking, I'm like, this morning it's like, beep, beep, get off. Oh my God, here we go. You can feel the difference. Don't you want a morning like that? You want a morning where your eyes open and you feel the sheets and you are noticing the pillow and you're kind of waking up in your body before that sticky negative stuff takes over. Holy cow, I love that this is available to us. And I love knowing the health benefits that just three minutes. That's all this takes, whether you're writing it in a gratitude journal at night or you're reflecting as I do, and Dr. Amen does, because I did a gratitude journal for a long time and you just train your brain to default to it or you wake up in the morning, I'm going to take on this morning practice.
(26:19):
That's what I'm going to do. I'm taking this one with me. I love this and I just want you to pick the one that you're going to do and keep it simple. You can keep it fun. I didn't lose it, my husband today. I took a warm shower and allowed myself to linger there. Another one that happened for me that I'm thinking about is as I woke up an hour later, Chris's office is next to our bedroom and I yelled, Hey, good morning, honey. And he goes, Hey, look out the window. There's a deer. And sure enough, right out there, there was a deer standing right in our yard munching on the hosta that are dying off in the fall. And I just took a moment and I just really watched the deer for a minute. That's a moment of gratitude. Now, here's what I can tell you.
(27:01):
If you pick the one that works for you and you do it consistently, your body is going to start to relax. The stress is going to lower. You're going to help yourself heal and reset and feel better, and you deserve that. And whether you prefer to do it in the morning like Dr. Tara or you prefer to do it at night like me and Dr. Amen and Dr. Aditi, who cares, just do whatever works for you. And that brings me to tool number three. Tool number three is a way to use your phone for something great instead of all that doom scrolling and time wasting that you and I can get caught up in. And here's something I know that you have time to do. It's called the gratitude text chain, and it comes from the super cool study that was done by psychologist Shelly Kerr at the School of Applied Psychology at Griffith University in Australia.
(27:54):
So let me explain how they did this study. There were 122 people in the study and everybody in the study, they were waiting to get into therapy. So they're in high distress, high need. If you've ever tried to get into therapy, it can be very challenging to get that first appointment. So you're waiting around. And so they take these 122 people that are on edge waiting to get in to get the help that they need. And they were divided into three groups randomly assigned.
(28:21):
A third of the people were assigned to a gratitude group. Another group was assigned to a kindness group, and then there was the third group who became the control group.
Mel Robbins (28:31):
And all I'm going to say is can we just give a big shout out to the control group people? I mean, if I got into study, I'd probably be in the control group. I wouldn't get to do the good stuff, but we got to have the control group. They're the ones doing the tough stuff for us. So shout out to the control group. I'm very grateful for you. So you got about 40 people in each gratitude group, kindness group control group. Now, here's what they were doing. The gratitude group were asked to write daily about things they were grateful for. That's it. The Kindness group. They were asked to perform acts of kindness and then reflect on them, hold the door open, buy coffee for the person behind you, the control group. Were just asked to write about just the neutral daily activities. So basically just doing some non-emotional journaling about what's going on, what happened? Well, here's what happened with the group that practiced gratitude every single day after two weeks of writing about what they were grateful for.
(29:28):
Every day they felt less depressed, they reported more positive emotions, and overall they felt better about their lives. How cool is that? And here's the part that really matters. Those improvements didn't disappear a month later. The effects were still here. I mean, that is just so amazing. They found that in the letter writing study too, that there's this afterglow effect when you intentionally program your mind for gratitude. So this isn't just some quick high, it creates this real shift in how they're feeling and how they're processing and experiencing their day-to-day lives simply by training their mind to scan for things that they're grateful for. Because let's face it, when you're depressed or stressed or heartbroken or under a lot of pressure, that's all you see. So this again is like an act of healing. It's an act of intentional defiance. It's getting rid of that stickiness and it has an after effect.
(30:27):
I love this. Now, the kindness group also showed significant improvements in wellbeing, but it was slightly less than the gratitude group, the control group, they didn't show the same improvements at all in mood or wellbeing as either the gratitude or the kindness groups. So what does this confirm? It confirms that it was the emotional and reflective aspect of gratitude, not just journaling or texting about something in general that drove the effects. So you know what that made me want to try? I'll tell you, I realized, and you probably realize you're texting people all the time and probably the same people, but you don't really connect every text thread in your phone. It's like so transactional. It's logistics, it's works. You pick up something, dinner, did you feed the dogs? Did you see that email? I'm so behind today. How are we doing on that thing?
(31:19):
Have we heard about such and such? I looked at the message thread with Tracy, who is the executive producer of the Mel Robbins podcast. I love her so much. We have worked together for 10 years. I can't remember the last time either of us talked about anything that we were grateful for outside of just like, whoa, boom. Like something real, something good, something kind. Our entire text chart is like, did you do this? Did you see this? Can we do this? Here's this link. What about that? What do you think about this? Here's, here's the thing to review. When can you get on the phone? And so I thought, what if I just start dropping in like a gratitude text inside the other things and see what happens? And it's amazing what happens when you start to interrupt a transactional group text, whether it's with your family, whether it's with people at work, whether it is with friends that you occasionally are touching base with.
(32:19):
And all you do is every once in a while, once a day, just pop in something you appreciate, something that you're grateful, point out something that went well. Talk about a random kind thing that somebody did call out something that one of the people on the text chain did that you really appreciate. Like a little public shout out, not just the transactional crap. No extra commentary. Just send it. Oh my gosh. It's like sprinkling magic dust and a text chain because the response almost immediately, they send something back. It changes the tone of your conversations. Like imagine if when you're texting your work colleagues or your friends or your family, it's not just logistics. Hey, I'm really proud of you for this. Hey, you did a really good job for that. Hey, congratulations. I heard that your husband just finished his first round of rotations for residency.
(33:15):
How are you feeling about that? It changes the tone of your conversation. You don't even have to announce it. You don't have to go gratitude text chain. You can just say, I'm going to sprinkle a little gratitude into the text chain. It brings light into the middle of a hard week or a hard day in the best part. It's so fast. It doesn't ask anything of you except for honesty and a little generosity. And a little gratitude goes a long way. And it also spreads because
Mel Robbins (33:42):
Guess what? In our company, there's now a Slack channel, a slack channel for the whole company called Personal Victories and celebrations. Today in the company, one of our colleagues announced that, oh my gosh, she's expecting her first baby in March. How cool is that? We celebrate weddings. People do shout outs because their partners are doing their first exhibit of their new company at a farmer's market.
(34:06):
It is so cool, it's infectious, it's contagious. It gets all that negative stickiness out of people's way, and it lifts everyone up. That's why it works. It's not just about feeling grateful, it's about sharing it. And that's what makes the positivity sticky. If negativity has been what sticky, we can get it out of there and we can make more positivity stick. And so here's what you're going to do. This is the tool gratitude group text. You're just going to drop a little gratitude into any of your typical text chains. And if you really want to go and supersize this, just get two or three of your favorite people and text them this episode and say, Hey, I just listened to this. It's all about gratitude and rewiring your mind. I thought of you. What if we started just a little group text chain and we just use this text chain to share one thing that you're grateful for, and we hold ourselves accountable to really being intentional about gratitude once a day every single day.
(35:11):
We can remind each other of this because this small habit makes gratitude visible and contagious, and it reminds you of the goodness in the world. It reminds you of what's going well. It reminds you that you have enough right now, even while you may be working on more. Okay, I know I threw a lot at you. Aren't you grateful? Aren't you grateful that I threw a lot at you? Of course you are, because I want you to find something that really works for you. So let me give you a quick recap. There are three tools. The first tool, the unsent letter. You've got to try this one once a week. Just write a one page letter to somebody that you're grateful for. You don't even have to send it, just write it. Remember, this comes from a study from Indiana University and it showed that this sort of journaling can lead to reductions and depression and anxiety.
(35:59):
It just makes you feel more connected to people. And boy will it lift somebody up if you choose to send it. The second tool is the three minute Night Journal. Every night before bed, take three minutes and just write down three things that you're grateful for from that day. This comes from a study from the University of California San Diego, and it showed that this could lead to better sleep quality, lower inflammation, less stress in the body, and higher heart rate variability, which is a very, very positive, positive thing. When your heart rate variability is high, it means that your nervous system is flexible. That's about resilience.
Mel Robbins (36:38):
It means it handles stress and it bounces back quickly. And if you want to try Dr. Tara's morning gratitude, loving those sheets and really kind of setting your mind, I'm being present and grateful before the rest of the world comes in.
(36:57):
That's another way that you can do this. So is scanning your day. At the end of the day, it all is the same science and the same benefit. And the third tool, gratitude group text. Just start dropping that into your texts and watch the magic happen. If you want to supersize it, just grab one or two people. Tell 'em that you want to start being more intentional about being grateful, that you'd be grateful and you'd appreciate them. If they could hold you accountable, that you can do this together once a day, every single day. It's going to lift you up. It's going to lift them up. This study came from the School of Applied Psychology at Griffith University in Australia, and it shows that intentionally practicing gratitude and kindness can lead to lower depression levels and more positive emotions. Now remember, you can do all of them or just pick one, the one that's going to work best for you because you want to know the one that's going to work best for you, the one that you do.
(37:53):
So I'd love to know which one you're going to be doing. You can tell me in the comments and the reviews, and if there's one thing that I truly hope that you take away from this episode and the time that we spent together today, it's that gratitude. This is not toxic positivity. Your gratitude practice is about intentionally programming your mind. It is about protecting yourself from the onslaught of negativity. It is about presence and feeling that what you have and where you are is enough, being more deeply connected to the people around you. And what we've learned here today is that in a world that wants you to believe the negative, that is training your mind to go in a negative direction, you've got to fight back. And these three simple tools are how you do it. And you also learned that science backs up that this kind of gratitude training your brain to stop ignoring what's working and focus on the things that you value.
(38:57):
It's real. The research is clear. When you do this the right way with intention, with consistency, it changes everything. It changes your brain, it changes your body, it changes your stress response, it changes your outlook. You just need one small shift, one letter, three lines in a journal, one little drop of gratitude and a text message to a friend. That's how you begin. That's how you interrupt the stress. It's how you start noticing your life again. And if you do, your brain will follow. Your body will catch up. That negativity won't feel so sticky. It'll break apart and disappear. And you will start to feel more grounded and connected, not just to your life, but to the people in it. So choose one tool and try it. Give yourself the gift of noticing what's good. Give yourself the gift of setting your mind to what you value.
(40:07):
And I promise you absolutely everything will start to change for the better. And in case no one else tells you today, I wanted to be sure as your friend to tell you that I love you and I believe in you, and I believe in your ability to create a better life. And there is no doubt in my mind that the tools that we talked about today and using gratitude in the intentional act of setting your mind to the positive and really feeling the benefit of that. If you do that, the change is going to start within you and ripple outside of you, and you are going to start to feel like your life is getting better. Alrighty, thank you so much for being here. I cannot wait to be with you in the very next episode, and I will welcome you in the moment you hit play.
(40:57):
Alrighty. Thank you so much for being here with me on YouTube. I'm so grateful that you watched all the way to the end. I'm also grateful that you are subscriber because it's one way that you can show me and the team that you really appreciate the incredible content that we're bringing you here on YouTube. If that subscriber button is lit up, just hit it. It's free. That way you don't miss a thing. And speaking of that, I know you're thinking, alright, what's the next video that I should watch, Mel? Well, I think you're going to love this one, and I will be there to welcome you in the moment you hit play.
Key takeaways
Gratitude is how you intentionally rewire your mind when the world’s negativity floods the vessel that is you; it’s an act of defiance that resets your internal settings.
When you practice gratitude, you calm down faster, think clearer, sleep better, and see that what you have is enough; where you point attention, your emotions and actions go.
Once a week, write a one-page unsent gratitude letter to someone; the Indiana University study showed reduced depression and anxiety, with benefits lasting even weeks later.
Each night, take three minutes to journal three small things you’re grateful for; UC San Diego research found better sleep, lower inflammation, and higher heart-rate variability.
Starting a tiny gratitude group text with people you trust builds a steady loop of kindness, keeps you intentionally grateful, and turns your phone into a source of support.
Resources
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- Psychotherapy Research: Does gratitude writing improve the mental health of psychotherapy clients? Evidence from a randomized controlled trial
- Psychosomatic Medicine: A pilot randomized study of a gratitude journaling intervention on HRV and inflammatory biomarkers in Stage B heart failure patients
- BigThink: A Harvard physician’s guide to rewriting your brain’s stress responses
- Biological Psychiatry: Default-mode and task-positive network activity in Major Depressive Disorder: Implications for adaptive and maladaptive rumination
- Scientific Reports: The Effects of Positive or Negative Self-Talk on the Alteration of Brain Functional Connectivity by Performing Cognitive Tasks
- American Psychological Association: Dispositional Optimism and Physical Health: A Long Look Back, A Quick Look Forward
- John Hopkins Medicine: The Power of Positive Thinking
- Amen Clinics: 5 Ways to Stop Feeling So Depressed
- American Psychological Association: Making mindset science work in the real world
- Verywell Mind: How Words of Affirmation Can Enhance Your Relationship
- Greater Good Science Center: he Science of Gratitude
- International Journal of Depression and Anxiety: The Association between Gratitude and Depression: A Meta-Analysis
- Healthline: How to Start Journaling
- Mayo Clinic: Positive thinking: Stop negative self-talk to reduce stress
- Greater Good in Action: Gratitude Journal
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