← L² Lab
🌸 Wellbeing
Card 03
🙏 ✨ 😊

Why does saying "thank you" make YOU feel better?

💭 How to Think About This

Gratitude seems like something you do for others. But research shows that regularly noticing and appreciating good things in your life changes YOUR brain. Grateful people are happier, healthier, and more resilient. Why would simply paying attention to what's good have such powerful effects?

🔒 Start writing to unlock hints

Gratitude works by REDIRECTING ATTENTION. Our brains have a negativity bias—we notice problems more than positives. Gratitude is deliberate practice in noticing the good, countering this natural tendency.

Studies show regular gratitude practice: improves sleep quality, reduces depression, increases optimism, strengthens relationships, and even improves physical health! It's one of the most researched wellbeing interventions.

"I'm grateful for my family" is nice but vague. "I'm grateful that Mom asked how my test went and really listened" is powerful. Specificity deepens the emotional impact and prevents gratitude from becoming routine.

• THREE GOOD THINGS: write 3 specific good things each evening
• GRATITUDE LETTER: write to someone you never properly thanked
• MENTAL SUBTRACTION: imagine life without something you have
• SAVORING: pause to fully appreciate good moments

Gratitude rewires your attention from what's missing to what's present!

How gratitude works:

• Counters negativity bias through deliberate focus

• Strengthens neural pathways for noticing positives

• Creates positive emotion that broadens thinking

• Builds social connections through appreciation

Key insight: Gratitude isn't about pretending everything is fine—it's about not letting real problems overshadow real goods. It's a skill that improves with practice.

🤔 Which thinking lens(es) did you use?

Select all the lenses you used:

👨‍👩‍👧 For Parents & Teachers

🌱 A Small Everyday Story

A tired evening. Everything feels hard.
"What went well today?" someone asks.
Reluctant pause. Then: "Well, lunch was good..."
Another pause. "And that text from my friend..."
Something shifts. The day looks different now.

See more guidance →

Key concepts: Attention training, negativity bias, broaden-and-build theory, gratitude interventions, specificity effect.