I’m angry. I often wake up and think of who her, him, what.
What they did. I’m angry.
At the friend who stopped returning calls for no reason. At the ex who never admitted she was wrong. At the family member who stopped talking to me.
Who was right? Who was wrong? I have no idea. Thoughts are fake news. No idea no clue.
I wrote this five years ago: gratitude and anger can’t exist in the head at the same time.
But sometimes to practice my own advice feels like bullshit.
And I’m lost.
AJ Jacobs has a top secret formula for writing a bestseller.
I shouldn’t say formula. He works hard. He’s a great writer. I describe the formula in my Quora Space.
He just wrote a book that will change my life. “Thanks a Thousand”, where he says thank you in person to the 1000 people involved in creating a single cup of coffee.
Read it.
I don’t know who suggested it.
But AJ and I used to grab lunch occasionally. Then we stopped.
Let’s do Skype lunches.
We’d both grab lunch. Then Skype each other while we eat.
Avoid traveling to a restaurant, waiting for food. Getting served. The other people in the restaurant,.
We just hang out on Skype and talk. He makes me laugh.
AJ wanted to have more gratitude in his life. “More than half of my life is spent annoyed. I wanted to flip it.”
But its too easy, too cliche, to just say “thank you” for the sun rising, for waking another day, for kids, for the blah blah.
“Thanks” is a placebo. Real gratitude is the medicine.
***
There’s a ton of studies about the benefits of having more gratitude in life.
Here are some of the results that I looked up when preparing for my podcast with AJ:
- Better outlook on the future. More optimism.
- Less medical complaints (significantly less between the group that wrote a gratitude journal and the group that didn’t).
- More generosity, more friends, more income, better health, etc. etc.
Gratitude is a miracle drug.
It’s been shown to reduce the effects of cancer, Alzheimer’s, depression, and people like you better.
But the studies say you have to have “intense” gratitude.
Do you just say, “I’m grateful the sun exists?” Or do you figure out a way to go deeper?
AJ figured it out. And then went beyond that.
He was grateful for a cup of coffee.
He went to the barista who poured the coffee and said “thank you”. He thanked the owner of the coffee store.
He flew to Columbia and thanked the farmers.
He thanked the truck drivers who carried the coffee to the city.
He thanked the pesticide sprayer of the warehouse that stored the coffee.
He thanked the people who provided the water that is used to brew the coffee. He even thanked the CEO of Exxon for making the oil that supplied all the transportation that got the coffee here.
He thanked one thousand people.
And it was hard. He constantly had to go back to the research to remind himself of the benefits. He constantly had to figure out where the extreme was: do you have to thank the parents of all the people he first thanked? (Answer: not really).
He experimented with “Extreme Gratitude” over one single cup of coffee.
And his life changed. It got better.
AJ: I walk down the street now and think of the good things in my life instead of dwelling on the bad. I’m happier.
Then he told me what he learned about Extreme Gratitude.
***
I want to get better at gratitude. When I look at my blog I’ve written at least 15 articles about gratitude since 2010.
But I want to improve. I want AJ to tell me how I could walk out of this podcast and be better.
And I don’t want the usual BS about gratitude. I only want what he’s learned since starting his Extreme Gratitude adventure.
I don’t want, “I’m giving thanks for a new day.” I don’t want easy.
***
AJ’s TEN GRATITUDE EXERCISES FOR ME:
1) WRITE A NOTE TO SOMEONE FROM YOUR PAST
Better than just a gratitude journal. Actually find someone who changed your life, even in a small way, and take action.
A common theme is that actions are more powerful than words, are more powerful than emotions, are more powerful than thoughts.
OK, one second: I’m going to write a note to someone…
I just wrote to Callie Oettinger, who works with one of my favorite authors Steven Pressfield.
I’m grateful she kept me in mind for when Steve is coming to NYC so he can come on my podcast.
2) LOOK PEOPLE IN THE EYES
“The barista told me people just use her as a vending machine when they get their morning cup of coffee. Nobody looks her in the eyes.”
So yesterday I looked the barista in my eyes and smiled when I asked for my coffee. She smiled back. It felt good.
AJ warned me: In all my travels I met a barista or two or three who will give you decaf instead of regular if you don’t look them in the eyes.
3) “GRATEFUL” VERSUS “THANKS”
Don’t say thanks. Say, “I’m grateful”.
People say “thanks” so much that it has no power anymore. It’s just a placeholder for “words”.
So since I read AJ’s book I’ve been saying “I’m grateful for…” instead of “thanks”. I can directly see the extra impact.
Another friend of mine says, “I appreciate you…” whenever he wants to thank someone. I bet that works well also.
4) PUT SOME THOUGHT INTO IT
Don’t just say “thanks” when someone does something for you. Dig deep. WHY are you thankful?
In the middle of the podcast, I wanted to try a new thing.
I called up, right there in the podcast (you’ll hear it), the professor who threw me out of graduate school in 1991.
I said, “Merrick [Furst], I’m really grateful you kicked me out of graduate school. If you hadn’t done that, I wouldn’t be living this great life now and you and I probably wouldn’t be the great friends we are now.”
Merrick, AJ, and I then had a discussion about how one can respond to gratitude like that.
AJ said, “Pay it forward. Be grateful to someone else. So you can have yet another awkward conversation with the next person.”
But putting that extra thought into it created A MOMENT instead of just meaningless words.
Life is a collection of MOMENTS. Have as many of them as possible. Not just words and clicks and likes and then sleep.
5) SAVOR
I get my coffee. It’s too hot. I hate it too hot.
And then there’s about three seconds when it’s just right when it’s not too hot not too cold and then it’s disgusting so I gulp it down.
But drink, let the liquid flush over all your taste buds. Hold it there. Feel the flavor. Taste. Be grateful for that taste.
I did it today. I created another MOMENT instead of just a gulp.
Savor a kiss. Savor the beautiful rooftops you pass by as you walk around the block. Savor the hard work that was put into a movie you love. Savor the smile of your child.
Collect more MOMENTS.
6) BUT WHAT IF YOU’RE ANGRY?
I’m angry at someone. I told AJ. How can I get it out of my head? It’s hard to be grateful.
TAKE ACTION. Do something generous for someone else. That will push away the anger.
Every time you feel the fury, the anger that bubbles up like vomit after a 10-course dinner, take action, help someone, be generous, be pro-social, TAKE ACTION. Do something, don’t just think something.
OK, OK. I’ll try. I will try. I can’t promise it will work but I’m going to try.
7) SAY IT OUT LOUD
AJ said: I put on my headphones so people think I’m on the phone. And then I say things out loud.
If I notice I’m grumpy, I start saying positive things out loud. Things I’m grateful for.
When you say it out loud it engages the frontal cortex instead of just the lizard brain.
So your entire brain gets engaged in the act of gratitude instead of just your gut instincts. Your gut instincts evolved to have a negativity bias. We evolved to avoid the poisonous berry, the bush with the lion behind it.
But we don’t need that negativity anymore. And that’s controlled by the most primitive part of our brain.
When you say it out loud, say EVERYTHING out loud that’s positive and grateful, the prefrontal cortex takes over from the lizard brain and creates a positive outlook.
I talk out loud all day long, AJ told me.
And people don’t think you’re crazy.
He just laughed at that.
8) A-Z GRATITUDE
AJ: If you have trouble going to sleep, don’t just count to 100.
Count A to Z and for each letter, think of something your grateful for that starts with that letter.
If you had “Apple Pie” last night, then you’re grateful for [A]pple pie. Then you read a good [B]ook, and so on.
Does it make you sleep?
I’ve never made it to Z.
9) TWEET
Gratitude is selfish.
Remember the results of having gratitude. It makes ME better. Not the person I’m grateful towards.
But… it’s nice to know people appreciate what you do.
But what, I ask AJ, if you can’t get in touch with them?
Actions are louder than thoughts.
Tweet to them, AJ told me.
10) THE GRATITUDE MUSCLE
Gratitude is a muscle.
The more you exercise it intensely using the ideas above, the more benefits you will have, the easier it will be for you to go from anger and fear to gratitude and well-being.
I want to practice this as much as possible.
AJ’s book, “A Thousand Thanks” about all the thank you’s he personally made on his quest to thank people for a single cup of coffee has inspired me.
Read it. I like books that make my life better. This one has already started.
—-
And I don’t know if I express it enough to him.
But AJ, I’m grateful you write your books and I’m grateful you come on my podcast and let me ask you any question I write about them.
I’m grateful you came to my hour of comedy six weeks ago.
And I’m grateful you gave me that advice, YOU NOW WHEN, about you know what.
And, I guess today, I need to start looking people in the eyes.
James Altucher is the author of the bestselling book Choose Yourself, editor at The Altucher Report and host of the popular podcast, The James Altucher Show, which takes you beyond business and entrepreneurship by exploring what it means to be human and achieve well-being in a world that is increasingly complicated. Follow him on Facebook and Twitter.
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