Gratitude Myths that Bug Me.

If you’re grateful all the time how will you change your PARENTING for the better? Won’t you just continue, blind to all the ways you are hurting your children? No!

This is the biggest myth around the practice of gratitude. Studies actually show the OPPOSITE! Gratitude helps you to see all the good things you are already doing but it doesn’t blind you. It does not make you complacent or lazy either.

In fact, studies show it opens up and broadens our perspective, allowing us to see more things - more choices, more options, more ways we can be better to ourselves and our children - and already are.

And almost more importantly, it redirects our brain’s energy toward the good — which takes effort — because we are fighting evolutionary process and the mindsets that have kept our species alive and kicking for millions of years — not everything is a threat any more and gratitude is a great way to teach our brains to notice. That doesn’t sound very lazy to me - that sounds like work!

Gratitude is also not blind positivity - as I mentioned it has been proven to expand your perspective not contract it.

Blind positivity is found in statements like “No Bad Days” or the spiritual hijacking social media messaging of #blessed. But gratitude is actually the opposite of what cognitive scientist and psychologist, Scott Barry Koftman calls Tragic Optimism in his article “The Opposite of Toxic Positivity”: Gratitude in a vacuum does not work and so if it were to somehow make you “too” positive (i.e. naive) it would eventually stop working altogether.

Because although no one wishes suffering upon anyone, Gratitude needs contrast. And so the myth that you can’t be grateful in tough times is stamped out too. If this pandemic has shown us anything it’s that in tough times we actually increase our sense of gratitude not decrease it. Hard times prove to us both our resiliency and also the loss of things we may have taken for granted like eating at a restaurant or seeing friends, ends up reminding us of what we have left, and what we have becomes precious.

“Gratitude as a fleeting emotion can come and go, but gratefulness, or “existential gratitude,” can pervade your entire life, throughout its ups and downs. It asks for nothing but is on the lookout to find the hidden benefit and the opportunities for growth in everything—even during a global pandemic. As Emmons said at the recent International Meaning Conference, “Gratitude is not just a switch to turn on when things go well; it is also a light that shines in the darkness.”” - from the Kaufman article in the Atlantic.

Gratitude leads to sense of purpose and a desire to do more. People who practice gratitude are more successful at reaching their goals and they feel more energetic and alive while on that journey.

So with that said it seems pretty obvious that parenting with gratitude is a great option for those of us who may have struggled along the way. I certainly was looking for a new relationship with my inner critic when I decided to add a daily gratitude practice to my life — I had had enough “Bad Mom-ing” for one life time.

Gratitude has helped me to open up my perspective to see all the good tings I am already doing and to allow myself to say “You are doing a damn fine job Stef” and a new one that I never go to say before:

“Your loving heart and intention to parent differently is enough.”

So if it’s your intention to parent differently - do not rule gratitude out as a soft and unnecessary skill. Practice every day and watch as your goals become reality.