If you had told me a few years ago that gratitude would help me grow as a person, I probably would’ve smiled politely and then immediately changed the subject.
Because in my head, gratitude was… I don’t know… cheesy?
Like those quotes you see on social media with sunsets and cursive fonts.
“Be grateful for everything 💫”
Cool. Thanks. Very helpful.
Meanwhile, I’m stressed, behind on work, forgot to reply to three people, and somehow burned toast.
Twice.
So yeah—I wasn’t exactly in my “wow I’m so grateful” era.
But then something weird happened.
I hit one of those phases—you know the ones—where everything just feels a little off. Not terrible, not dramatic, just… off.
Low energy. Low motivation. Slightly annoyed at everything for no clear reason.
And somehow, accidentally, I started noticing small things.
Not because I was trying to be deep. Just… out of boredom, maybe?
And that’s where this whole thing started.
?? First Weird Shift: Gratitude Isn’t About Being Happy All the Time
This was my biggest misunderstanding.
I thought gratitude meant pretending everything is great.
It does not.
You can be:
- Tired
- Frustrated
- Confused about your life choices (hello, 2 AM thoughts)
…and still feel grateful for something.
Both can exist.
Which is kinda wild, honestly.
Like one day I remember thinking:
“Okay, today sucked… but also, that coffee this morning? Solid.”
And weirdly, that didn’t erase the bad day—but it softened it.
Just a little.
And sometimes, a little is enough.
?? Gratitude Practice #1: Notice the Small Stuff (Like… Really Small)
I used to think gratitude had to be about big things.
Health. Family. Life milestones.
Which are important, obviously.
But on a random Tuesday?
Those things don’t always feel… present.
So I started smaller.
Like:
- The way sunlight hits the wall in the morning
- Finding money in an old jacket (elite feeling)
- That first sip of coffee when you didn’t even realize how tired you were
Tiny things.
Almost stupidly tiny.
But they add up.
It’s like your brain slowly starts going:
“Oh… we’re noticing good stuff now? Okay, I can do that.”

?? Gratitude Practice #2: Write It Down (Even If It Feels Awkward at First)
I resisted this one for a while.
Because journaling felt… like a lot.
But then I tried something super low-effort.
Just writing down 3 things at the end of the day.
That’s it.
No deep reflections. No life analysis. Just:
- “Good sandwich”
- “Didn’t procrastinate as much”
- “Nice conversation with a friend”
Very sophisticated.
But over time, something shifted.
I started looking for those moments during the day.
Because I knew I’d write something later.
And suddenly, my days felt less like a blur.
More like… a collection of small wins.
?? Gratitude Practice #3: Catch Yourself Complaining (This One Hurt a Little)
Okay. I complain a lot.
Not in a dramatic way—just little things:
“This is annoying.”
“Why is this taking so long?”
“I don’t feel like doing this.”
Normal stuff, right?
But once I started paying attention, I realized how constant it was.
Like background noise.
So I tried something:
Every time I caught myself complaining, I’d pause and flip it.
Not in a fake, toxic positivity way.
Just… a slight shift.
“This is annoying… but at least I have the opportunity to do it.”
“I’m tired… but I did get some things done today.”
It felt forced at first.
Still kinda does sometimes.
But it changes the tone of your thoughts.
And your thoughts? They shape everything.
A Random Story (Because This Still Makes Me Laugh)
I once spilled coffee all over my laptop bag.
Like… everywhere.
My first reaction:
“ARE YOU SERIOUS RIGHT NOW.”
Classic.
But then—because I’d been practicing this gratitude thing—I paused and thought:
“Okay… at least it wasn’t the laptop itself.”
And I just started laughing.
Because yeah—it still sucked. But it could’ve been worse.
And that tiny shift saved me from spiraling into a full bad mood.
?? Gratitude Practice #4: Appreciate People (Out Loud, Not Just in Your Head)
This one’s underrated.
I used to think nice things about people… and then just never say them.
Like:
“That was really thoughtful of them.”
“They handled that well.”
“I appreciate them.”
And then I’d just… move on.
Why??
Now I try to actually say it.
Even something simple like:
“Hey, I appreciated that. Thanks.”
And you can feel the difference.
It strengthens relationships in a way that’s hard to explain.
Also—it feels good. For both sides.
Win-win.

?? Gratitude Practice #5: Stop Waiting for “Big Moments” to Feel Growth
This one took me a while to understand.
I used to think personal growth had to look like:
- Big achievements
- Major breakthroughs
- Dramatic life changes
But honestly?
Most growth happens quietly.
It looks like:
- Responding calmly instead of reacting
- Not overthinking something for once (rare, but exciting)
- Choosing to try again even when you don’t feel like it
And gratitude helps you notice those moments.
Which makes you realize:
“Oh… I am changing. Slowly. But still.”
?? Gratitude Practice #6: Use It as a Reset Button
Some days just… go sideways.
Nothing works. Everything feels off. You’re annoyed at things that don’t even make sense.
On those days, gratitude becomes less of a habit and more of a reset.
Not a full fix.
Just a reset.
Like:
“Okay. What’s one thing that doesn’t suck right now?”
Sometimes the answer is:
“My bed is comfortable.”
“I have snacks.”
“This moment will pass.”
Not groundbreaking.
But grounding.
And that’s enough to stop the downward spiral.
A Slightly Honest Moment
There are still days when I don’t feel grateful.
At all.
Days where everything feels heavy and even thinking about “positive mindset” makes me roll my eyes again.
And on those days?
I don’t force it.
Because forced gratitude feels fake.
Instead, I just… leave the door open for it.
Maybe later. Maybe tomorrow.
And weirdly, it always comes back.
?? A Few Random Gratitude Things That Helped Me
- Saying “that was nice” out loud when something small happens
- Taking a mental snapshot of a good moment
- Re-reading old journal entries and realizing how far I’ve come
- Noticing what didn’t go wrong (very underrated)
Outbound Links You Might Actually Like
- Zen Habits (simple, calming thoughts on gratitude and mindfulness)
- Wait But Why (for when you want deep thoughts with humor and weird drawings)
So… How Gratitude Enhances Personal Growth (Without Being Annoying About It)
It doesn’t magically fix your life.
It doesn’t turn you into some perfectly balanced human who has it all figured out.
But it does:
- Shift your focus from what’s missing to what’s there
- Help you notice progress you’d normally ignore
- Make tough moments feel a little less heavy
- Keep you grounded when your brain tries to spiral
And over time?
That adds up.
Final Thought (Before You Overthink This Like I Would)
You don’t need a perfect gratitude routine.
You just need to notice… one thing.
One small, random, slightly insignificant thing.
And let that be enough for today.
