David
Pollay
Read David's bio and previous columns
November 5, 2007
Gratitude and Giving
Will Lead to Your Success
(Due to the popularity of this column,
we are re-running it with added material.)
Think of some of your life’s achievements. It’s OK. No one’s watching.
Go ahead. What accomplishments make you proud of yourself?
Now ask yourself, how many of these life accomplishments did you achieve
completely on your own? Let me answer that question for you. The answer
is, none. Our successes always come with help.
The real question is, “Can you name the people who contributed to each
of your successes?” Who are they and what did they do? Write down their
names. Think about these people.
Now, I’ll bet you’re feeling a bit of gratitude, or even a burst of
gratitude. You have just reminded yourself how important others have
been to you in your life. You have not traveled alone.
Most of us feel some amount of stress when we think about what it will
take to achieve our dreams. We think, “How in the world are we going to
get from here to where we hope to be?” Luckily, the answer is, “Not
alone.” Other people will help us.
So what’s the best way to achieve your life goals? Here’s the first
answer. Look to the people who have already helped you. Thank each one
personally and privately. Tell them why they are important to you and
how they helped you succeed in the past. Let these people know how
valuable they are to you. If you feel that you’ve thanked someone
before, consider doing it again in an even more meaningful way. Keep
these people in your corner. University of Michigan psychologist
Christopher Peterson wrote in his book, “A Primer in Positive
Psychology”, “In our experience with many dozens of gratitude letters .
. . they ‘work’ 100 percent of the time in the sense that the recipient
is moved, often to tears, and the sender is gratified as well.”
Gratitude researcher Robert Emmons recently reviewed the growing
evidence that feelings of gratitude improve the quality of our lives. In
one study he found that people who “wrote up to five things for which
they were grateful or thankful” on a weekly basis “exercised more
regularly, reported fewer physical symptoms, felt better about their
lives as a whole, and were more optimistic about the upcoming week.”
Positive Psychology co-founder Martin Seligman, of the University of
Pennsylvania, and his colleagues also discovered that when people took a
few minutes each evening to write down “three good things” that happened
to them during the day, their happiness increased and their depressive
symptoms decreased.
Emmons found in another study that people who feel gratitude are more
likely to help others. Emmons wrote, “Gratitude leads not only to
feeling good, but also to doing good.”
So what’s the best way to achieve your life goals? Here’s the second
answer. Think about who else could help you. Through a lens of
gratitude, think about how you could repay them in advance for their
support. What could you do for them now? How could you help them in some
way? Your commitment to helping them will demonstrate two things: You
care about what they care about, and you appreciate the role they could
play in your life.
You will stand out as a giver, and leave the takers of the world
standing in line. Your new contacts will be grateful to you. And we
know what happens when people feel gratitude.
Gratitude and giving will lead to your success.
David J. Pollay
is a syndicated columnist with North
Star Writers Group, creator and host of “The Happiness Answer™”
television program, an internationally sought-after speaker and seminar
leader, and the author of “Beware of Garbage Trucks!™ - The Law of the
Garbage Truck™.” Mr. Pollay
is the
founder and president of TheMomentumProject.com, a strengths-based
training and consulting organization with offices in Delray Beach,
Florida and Washington D.C. Mr. Pollay is also the associate executive
director of the International Positive Psychology Association (IPPA).
Email him at
david@themomentumproject.com.
© 2007
David J. Pollay. Distributed by North Star Writers Group. May not be
republished without permission.
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