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Check out Owen's new book, Gratitude: A Way of Teaching

Saturday, April 25, 2015

Gratitude is Larger than Life

A friend of mine sent this the other day and I wanted to share it:

"One day, a friend called me on the phone. He was going through a difficult time and wondering if and when things would ever turn around and improve. 

I knew he was in a lot of pain, I didn't know then that he was considering suicide.

"If you could give a person only one thing to help them," he said, "what would it be?"

I thought carefully about his question, and then I replied, "It's not one thing, it's two: gratitude and letting go." 

Gratitude for everything, not just the things we consider good or a blessing. 

And letting go of everything we can't change.

A few years have passed since that day my friend called me on the phone.

 His life has turned around. His financial problems have sorted themselves out. 

His career has shifted. The two very large problems he was facing at that time have both sorted themselves out.

Someone once asked the artist Georgia O'Keeffe why her paintings magnified the size of small objects - the petals on a flower - making them 

appear larger than life, and reduced the size of large objects - like mountains - making them smaller than life. 

"Everyone sees the big things," she said. "But these smaller things are so beautiful and people might not notice them if I didn't emphasize them."

That's the way it is with gratitude and letting go.

 It's easy to see the problems in our lives. They're like mountains.

 But sometimes we overlook the smaller things; we don't notice how truly beautiful they are."

Tuesday, April 21, 2015

Huffington Post-Two Things I am Most Grateful For

Huffington Post started a new gratitude section. Check it out at:
I submitted the following in response to their question, "What are you most grateful for?" It was published a couple weeks ago. I absolutely love the wide range of blog posts on this site, from personal stories to Dr. Deepak Chopra writing about a recent study that shows cardiac patients who write gratitude journals benefit both psychologically and physically. Here is my posting:
Of all the things I have done in my life, the one activity that I am most grateful for is being a teacher. In one regard or another, we are all teachers. But, I have had the tremendous pleasure of being a 4th grade classroom teacher for 10 years and have learned more about myself, others and this world from this remarkable experience.
As a teacher, two of the greatest joys are learning from my students and integrating the practice of gratitude in our lives. Daily, I am given the opportunity to interact and connect with my students as we teach each other. When I realized that I could learn from my students, I had my first “A-ha” moment and that changed everything in my classroom. This awareness brought wonder and passion into my teaching. The paradigm of teacher/students is still constantly being flipped.
In my classroom, I have been incorporating writing “gratitudes” as an activity with the students. We start each day with a list of 5 things we are grateful for. By the end of the year, we have 1,000 gratitudes in our journals. Many students keep this habit up past their year with me. Attitudes are contagious and we encourage an “attitude of gratitude” in our classroom. Recently, I ran into a mom whose son was in my class 6 years ago and now is now in high school. She told me that he was so excited about writing a gratitude list that he came home and wrote a list of 100 gratitudes after his first day in my class.
"However, gratitude does not make every day perfect in our classroom. I still have challenging days, where gratitude is hard to find and thing irritates me more easily. But, I still have a choice to look for gratitude. On those challenging days, when I write a gratitude list, I feel a little better. This exercise helps me become a better teacher. One day in my classroom, a student asked, "Mr. Griffith, can we do a gratitude list together?" I was so pleased that I asked her what motivated her to ask this. She said, "You just looked so stressed today, I thought you could use some gratitude." That made me laugh but she was right, I was stressed and it did help."
One year, I had an inspirational student who saved her allowance and brought gratitude journals for her whole family. Her mom was in nursing school and overwhelmed. At the dinner table, they would share their gratitudes for the day and grow as a family. The mom came to me and thanked me for teaching gratitude to her daughter and helping her family. She said it helped her get through nursing school. From this student, I learned that the ripple effects of gratitude can spread to those around us.
Here is another lesson that I learned from a persistent student. In class, she would diligently complete her work and then ask for extra math work. I would give her math drills, word problems and math enrichment exercises. Taking these extra assignments, she would happily smile.
Then, one day I looked at her and said, “It is so good to see how much you love math.” She looked surprised and said, “On no, math is my hardest subject. After I heard you say that we should be grateful for the things that challenge us in life, I told myself I would work really hard on my hardest subject, math. Maybe with some extra work, I can turn it into my best subject.” She succeeded and it did not take long. She was soon one of the best math student in the class. 
This lesson was instantly applicable in my life and classroom. At times, I tend to shy away from activities that I do not think I am good at. But this student demonstrated that diving in and putting some extra effort into a challenging area will bring success. I still need to remind myself of this when I am confronted, almost daily, with areas in life that I might avoid instead of embracing. 
Yesterday, my son said, “Daddy, come draw with me.”  I almost said, “I am not a good artist.” But, I have said this repeatedly. In fact, I have said it so much, it had become automatic. Thankfully, I caught myself that time. Instead, I sat down, grabbed a crayon and completed a self-portrait, enjoying every second.
Finally, teaching allows me to practice gratitude in my work and continue growing as I learn from my students. They challenge me to practice “radical grateful,” as expressed in the following quote:

“People usually consider walking on water or in thin air a miracle. But I think the real miracle is not to walk on water or in thin air, but to walk on earth. Every day we are engaged in a miracle which we do not even recognize: a blue sky, green leaves, the black curious eyes of a child –our own two eyes. All is a miracle.” – Thich Nhat Hanh