This is a header

richmedia

Live a happier life: how to practise gratitude

Could practising gratitude, being grateful and appreciating life and loved ones improve our lives and make us happier? Many spiritual thinkers such as Eckhart Tolle believe so. Author and filmmaker Baptist de Pape explains how we can practice gratitude to open our hearts and live a happier life

By

Live a happier life: how to practise gratitude

Gratitude, the ability to count your blessings, is the ultimate way to connect to the heart and create even more abundance, writes Baptist de Pape in his book The Power Of The Heart.

mputopmobile

He explains the two levels of gratitude:

By increasing your awareness of everything in life you are grateful for, you make yourself more receptive to the great things in life. People who journal their gratitude are happier than others, and their happiness lasts. It works even better than therapy or anti-depressant drugs. Try keeping a gratitude diary to reap the benefits of practicing gratitude…

This is a in article MPU

Three blessings

Positive psychologist Martin Seligman created this exercise to increase happiness and wellbeing:

  • Each night for a week, take 10 minutes before you go to sleep to write down three things that went well for you today.
  • Write them in a journal or even in your notes section on your smartphone.
  • The things can be large, small, unimportant or important. For example, 'the train came on time' or 'my niece's surgery went well'.
  • Next to each one, answer the question ‘Why did this go well?’. Perhaps, 'because the train crews anticipated bad weather' and 'because my niece found a great doctor'.
  • Keep your list for at least a week and note how you begin to feel.

Adapted from The Power Of The Heart by Baptist de Pape (Simon & Schuster UK, £14.99)

More inspiration:

Read Dr Steve Taylor on kindness on LifeLabs

Read Cheryl Rickman on giving thanks on LifeLabs

Photograph: plainpicture/Westend61

mpubottommobile

1x2

1x3

left


page


skin


right


page


skin