Nothing challenges our beliefs like pain.
Whether physical, mental, or emotional, when pain strikes, all bets are off when it comes to what we might have expected in our responses.
That is why it’s crucial for us to have a tool to create context and perspective for those moments.
That tool is gratitude.
You cannot be stressed and genuinely grateful at the same time. You cannot be angry and grateful at the same time. They are counter-intuitive emotions.
It can be hard to find gratitude when your world seems to be crumbling. And it’s maddening when others tell you about the silver lining in your cloud or that there’s a purpose to everything. We know that, of course. But at that moment, that’s not what we need to hear. What we feel in that moment is that nothing matters except the moment and its pain.
The most helpful thing we can do is to contain the moment and gain some perspective, even distance from the pain.
The fastest path to that wisdom is gratitude. This is not about being grateful for the pain. In fact, sometimes it’s about anything but the pain. Sometimes, we need to rest the eyes of our soul for a moment. We need a life lens that takes away the harsh, painful glare. Simple gratitude can do that for us.
However, I know from personal experience that gratitude does not always come naturally. It is, too, a skill that must be honed and developed. It is also one of the most vital prerequisites for resilience.
If we are not grateful, we will not see the point in creating good. In the end, that’s what gratitude is really about – finding the good.
It may not be about everything in the moment, but it can be about something.
I remember during some dark days when it took all of my strength just to get through the day, there was always a sliver of light because of gratitude. It was my diversion from pain to peace. Even if just for a moment, it immersed me in something outside of the pain.
Taking time to seek the good and be grateful begins to balance the scales.
It was during these days that I began a life practice that still sustains me now, and that is my gratitude journal. Each day, I express gratitude. A journal is a natural expression for me as a writer. It can take many forms, but once we develop this life practice, the skill becomes a part of us, and something very special begins to happen.
We begin to seek the good in everything. We search for those reminders, and we find them. After all, whatever we seek is what we find.
This is what begins to establish a life centered around gratitude as a core value. It takes us beyond the moment and into a deeper and richer experience of life. When someone asks how I am able to see possibilities where others may not, it usually comes back to this. When we begin to seek the good, we begin to find it—not only in those days and times as an antidote to pain but also every day and in how we see our world overall.
Our thoughts are like magnets. When they are about what is good, that will be what we attract. Even when, on the surface, we may not see it, the good is there. And we will find it. That’s the power of gratitude. It changes our perspective about pain, but even more, it changes our perspective about life.