1. An attitude of gratitude
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Earlier this week while Canadians celebrated Thanksgiving, I'm was in North Carolina with my
mastermind group of 11 other women entrepreneurs celebrating victories such as a new book being
published, six-figure incomes and brilliant ideas for new business programs. And while the air of
success was running rampant in the room, there was also a great feeling of gratitude that we had all
met, gathered and continued to support and inspire each other - on both the business and personal
front.
Grateful to be part of this amazing group, it got me thinking about being thankful.
"Positive thanking" is as powerful as positive thinking. One inspires the other, and the simple act of
saying "thank you" creates a more positive experience. When you want to improve your mood,
enhance your relationship, your business or your life, or simply change the focus from something
negative to positive, saying "thank you" can do just that.
2. Gratitude has instant "feel good" power. It feeds the soul and fuels the heart. Giving a sincere "thank
you" creates a kinder, gentler society. Kindness begets kindness, and when something good
happens, and we acknowledge it, the positive effect is amplified.
Many human beings have a great capacity for taking things for granted and as someone once said,
feeling gratitude and not expressing it is like wrapping a present and not giving it.
Gratitude opens the gates to receive more blessings, abundance and opportunities. Saying, "thank
you" for the actions, things and people that matter not only makes you feel better, but also can
gather momentum to attract more good things.
The Universe, like most people, likes to be appreciated and then just wants to help out even more.
Invite gratitude in first, and success and wealth will follow.
There is also merit in being grateful for "gifts" we would rather have not received. Think of the
(many) times you've heard someone say, "Thank God, I didn't get that job," ... or marry that person,
buy that house or get into that car. Sometimes giving thanks assumes a kind of spiritual or personal
victory.
Life may not always be fun, or easy, but it is a gift. When we are grateful for life and all its
experiences - painful and otherwise - we become better people. We can be thankful for difficult
times, when we see that difficulties are meant to rouse not discourage us. Even gifts wrapped in
heartache are valuable, when we can recognize (and feel) the deeper meaning. As Eckhart Tolle
says, "Life will give you whatever experience is most helpful for the evolution of your
consciousness."
Gratitude also puts you in a place of contentment rather than one of lack or neediness, and that is a
much healthier space from which to create or attract greater success and abundance. When you
realize there is nothing lacking, a world of opportunity opens to you and you find the strength,
energy, and even joy, to carry on. I love how Winston Churchill put it: "Success is the ability to go
from failure to failure without losing enthusiasm."
In short, an attitude of gratitude allows space for even greater good, support, and acts of kindness to
enter in, and "thank you" together become two of the most powerful words on earth.
Author's Bio:
3. I'm a girl from the Canadian prairies who likes wide-open spaces, fresh ideas, a great story, and
inspiring environments, buildings and art of all kinds. I have written feature stories about
architecture, urban, rural and lakeside living, cool neighbourhoods, and everything from business to
pleasure (tourism and travel).
I believe that powerful writing, too, can link the artistic with the practical.
My feature writing has appeared in: Ottawa Citizen, Winnipeg Free Press, The Western Producer,
The Cottager, Manitoba Business Magazine, Manitoba's Northern Experience, Home City, Manitoba
Gardener, Ciao and up! (WestJet's magazine).
Barbara Edie
http://barbaraedie.com
http://www.selfgrowth.com/articles/an-attitude-of-gratitude-5