3 strategies for being grateful in all circumstances

3 Strategies For Being Grateful In All Circumstances

Sometimes generating a grateful spirit seems like the right thing to do…but feels difficult to actually conjure.

Maybe we are just in a funk or hooked into wishing things were different in our lives. And our attempts at feeling genuinely grateful for the good in our lives falls short.

Here are 3 specific ways that help me shift from blah (or even disappointed or frustrated) into that open, spacious, abundant heart space that happens when gratitude begins to naturally flow through again.

1. Gratitude for the good already in your life

“What if you woke up today with only the things that you thanked God for yesterday?”

What if you knew you will wake up tomorrow and the only things left in your life are the things you give thanks for today?

Gratitude for the good we have in our lives immediately brings us into the present moment.

It is a “presence cultivator” and the most brilliant one I can think of to help you build your “presence” muscles as you go through your day.  But it does more than that.

Focusing on the good right now will bring more good in…so it straddles both your present and your future in the very best of ways.  You reap the benefits of all the happiness and fulfillment available to you right now while moving yourself and your life into the growth and goodness of your future.

2. Gratitude for the difficult or lack in your life

It can be hard to generate genuine gratitude {Try saying that out loud! I can hardly say it in my head :)} …for things that feel difficult about our lives.

It can also feel hard to generate gratitude when we feel worn out and lacking.

When we feel inadequate and exhausted.

A while back, a friend sent me a link to a sermon from Pearl Church in Oregon. The pastor was remarking on the gospel of Luke, with the loaves of bread and fish that were to feed the multitudes.

The pastor asked us to consider why Jesus asked the disciples, “What do you have?” and then used the little they had to do miraculous things, instead of just doing it all himself.

He went on to say (I’m paraphrasing here):

“When you feel you have no time, take the little time you have, lift it to the God, ask Him to break it, to bless it, and see what He might do with it…

When you feel you have no heart left to give…take the little heart you have, offer it to the Lord to break it, bless it and see what He might do with it…

When you feel you have no money, no talent, no energy, no love or care left…take the little you can muster, offer it to the Lord ask him to break it, to bless it and then see what He might accomplish through it.”

So how do we authentically generate gratitude for the things that feel hard and difficult, for the parts of us that feel lacking?

We lift them up.  We ask those areas to be blessed.  We believe that there is nothing in our life right now that can not be used for our greatest good.  And we give thanks for those things as well.

3. Gratitude for the things you want to come into your life

Finally, how do we give thanks for the things not yet arrived?

Is it assumptive- or worse foolish– to want something that you might not get… to open yourself up to feeling disappointed if it doesn’t come through?

Here’s my take.

It comes back to the overly-attached concept.  I work to hold my desires and dreams with open hands.  I know I can’t out-dream God.  I follow the things that light me up, that make me happy, that I dream about and trust this or something better is on it’s way.

I’ve changed my dreams many times along the way- some things just lost their shine for me.

But the fastest way to figure out what a worthy goal is in your life is to take action. 

You can’t direct a still ship.

You have to be moving and dreaming and figuring out your true desires if you are going to refine them.

There has been times in my life I thought I wanted something.

I asked, I gave thanks and I was open to receiving.

I moved forward toward the goal but then in the process something bigger and better and more perfect arrived.

So go nuts- give thanks for all the good you can imagine and then go through your days with open hands ready and expectant to receive that or better!

Which of these 3 critical areas of gratitude do you have the hardest time with? Which is easiest for you?


Comments

12 responses to “3 strategies for being grateful in all circumstances”

  1. Lisabeth Avatar
    Lisabeth

    Oh my goodness this post is BEAUTIFUL. I’m most inspired by #2 — gratitude in the lacking places, lifting up what you do have to be blessed. It’s just what I needed to hear this morning. THANK YOU for sharing these words.

    1. Thank you, Lisabeth for sharing here!! I love hearing the message came to you at just the right moment 🙂

  2. Hi this is a wonderful post, and just what I needed to hear to make it through my challenges right now. I am always wondering how to stay grateful and present when it all gets a bit stormy. I especially like the idea of “raising up and blessing” my challenges and the things I feel lacking.
    Thank you for this helpful post.
    Kristi

    1. Hi Kristi- thanks for sharing…it was a huge perspective shift for me as well and has made a huge difference.

  3. krishna Avatar
    krishna

    I very much appreciate and resonate with the second principle. I am currently in the process of separation from my fiance. This process is a mystery and I am in continued awarenss of the opportunity to give thanks to the challenge of this mystery as I cannot see what it has in store. Break it, bless it and receive. Love it!

  4. beth lehman Avatar
    beth lehman

    thank you for this. since reading ann voskamp’s book these thoughts have been swirling around in my head. i find myself wasting precious time wishing and wanting sometimes for things to be different. i find when i start with gratitude my whole way of thinking changes. i’m so much more present in the moment when i’m grateful for right now. i want this for my children, too.

  5. This is a great post and like Beth mentioned, I can only advise to read Ann’s book or follow her blog. So many beautiful posts on there, we have been taking part in the 1000 things to be grateful for on her blog, every month you can download her gratitude list of three things and my son and I have been working with those every night before we go to sleep. It is so enriching. I really want my children to learn to be grateful and to become grateful adults because this is the only way to live a truly happy life in my opinion, with appreciation and reverence for our world and ourselves.
    Being thankful for our faults can be challenging, but it is a part of us and we should embrace it and work on it.
    You can also find on Ann’s site somewhere an article on how much a grateful list affects children, their grades, their attitude and their outlook on life overall, but as I said this affects not just children but adults alike.

  6. amy cormode Avatar
    amy cormode

    I find being grateful for the struggles in my life particularly difficult. I don’t often view them as positives. I have one situation right now in our family that comes to mind regarding disagreements on where we worship on Sundays. It’s not been fun or happy disagreeing on a topic so close to our hearts. I’ve not viewed it with gratitude at all, in fact we keep just sort of avoiding it. So, considering it through the lens of being thankful helps to reframe it. I am thinking it would also be helpful to consider some of my own personal struggles and limitations with gratitude. I never do that for sure. Maybe it would reframe these parts of my life as well.

  7. Lisa, this was such a great post. I struggle with being grateful for the difficult things in my life but as I read #1 I realized that I don’t often enough make the effort to be grateful for the good things either. If I woke up today with only the things I’d thanked God for yesterday I wouldn’t have had much at all. I take so much of the good stuff for granted each day! Your post was such a good reminder to give thanks in all circumstances and to strive to always have a grateful heart.

  8. Donna Thede Avatar
    Donna Thede

    This was such a great post!

  9. Lisa, a beautiful help for us! Thank you!
    I do so like checking in with you (even though I do so sporadically)! Especially on the gratitude thing, I find you are particularly well-tuned-in!
    I started listening to the Cleansing Gratitude audio meditations -lovely format! – yesterday morning on your Day 1 for 2016. Very sweet, soft vocals you have, yet you do challenge us!
    And here, the same. All of these aspects could use a bit more energy from me. I tend to gloss over appreciation for so many things my life —even my breath, being alive! —on my way from the urgent task to the priority list! I know many of your readers know what that’s like! 😉
    I grew up from a talented, compliant kid in the 60’s into a SuperMom of the late 70’s, 80’s, 90’s and it took ’til I was confronted with scripture to get me to slow down enough to know that quiet in one’s life (and space and time in the Great Outdoors) gives great opportunities for checking in with the Maker of the universe. Busy-ness and being *way-too* tuned in to the social/cultural “What’s In and of Interest This Year/This Week?” kept me from paying attention to my own spiritual needs.
    Now, so many years later, I spend a lot more time quietly and really feel out-of-it when I do not. The Gratitude- journaling for a few minutes is a great idea. I’ve done it off and on in the past. Thanks for the reminder. Your suggestions are something I will take to heart. Have a beautiful Thanksgiving!

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