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    Grateful Kids Are Healthier. Studies Find Benefits in 365 Days of Thanksgiving

    On Thanksgiving, everyone in my family goes around the table and shares what we're grateful for. There answers range from sentimental to appetite-driven (my personal go-to: semi-soft cheeses). It's one of my favorite parts of the holidays and something I only wished we'd carried on every day of my childhood.

    That was before I heard about the additional health benefits. According to multtiple studies, gratitude is mentally and physically nutritious for kids.

    "We know that grateful kids are happier [and] more satisfied with their lives," explains Hoftra University psychology assistant professor Jeffrey Froh in an article this week in The Washington Post. "They report better relationships with friends and family, higher GPAs, less materialism, less envy and less depression, along with a desire to connect to their community and to want to give back."

    That's not all. It's also believed to boost immune systems and lower blood pressure over time. In a Temple Univeristy study, patients with hypertension lowered their blood pressure just by calling a "gratitude" hotline everyday. If it's that effective on adults with health problems, imagine what announcing the good things in life at early age can do.

    In a study of early adolescents, Froh found that kids who journaled daily about their good fortune, over a period of two weeks, were less prone to depression and more satisfied with their lives overall. And that optimism and satisfaction made them more likely to take care of themselves physically in the long-term.

    Pyschologist Robert Emmons, author of the book "Thanks!", explains it this way: "Our emotional systems like newness, [but] we adapt to positive life circumstances so that before too long, the new car, the new spouse, the new house-they don't feel so new and exciting anymore. Gratitude makes us appreciate the value of something, and when we appreciate the value of something, we extract more benefits from it. "

    But like anything else, gratitude takes getting used to. Developing a 'thanking' routine, from journaling to dinner time shout-outs, is an essential element to all the studies that noted improvements in patients.

    A straightforward assignment for kids and their parents can kick-start the uptick. For starters, write down five things you're grateful for every day. If you can't think of five things, hone in on the senses, suggest Emmons. What is the best thing you've heard, tasted, touched, seen and smelled that particular day?

    "You can also use concrete reminders to practice gratitude, which can be particularly effective in working with children, who aren't abstract thinkers like adults are, " writes Emmons. "For instance, I read about a woman in Vancouver whose family developed this practice of putting money in gratitude jars. At the end of the day, they emptied their pockets and put spare change in those jars. They had a regular reminder, a routine, to get them to focus on gratitude. Then, when the jar became full, they gave the money in it to a needy person or a good cause within their community."

    Another way to focus on gratitude? Put a turkey on the dinner table. It's always a good reminder that being a member of the human family is way better than being a member of the bird family, particularly around Thanksgiving.

    Related:

    Simple way to show more gratitude

    Teaching kids gratitude

    Amazing Thanksgiving food and wine pairings

    10 easy Thanksgiving cookie recipes


     

    206 comments

    • Jimmy  •  6 months ago
      My kids who are asleep right now is what really makes me happy.....nothing material (and I have some really nice things) could ever come close to that. A hug from my kiddos is trully worth more than a million dollars to me....honestly.
      • dusty ling 6 months ago
        me too.
      • John 6 months ago
        You ain't alone in that brother. Nothing comes close.
      • johnd 6 months ago
        Completely agree !! Hugs used to be so freely given that you tend to take them for granted, but as my kids have gotten older, hugs have become more and more precious.
    • ☆Michelle☆  •  6 months ago
      I'm looking forward to volunteering at the animal shelter and donating some of my clothes this winter, and I'm 13. I may not be the happiest camper around, but I do love to see people smiling after I help them! :)
      • Steven S 6 months ago
        Animal Selter work can be for a lifetime...The Animals Need Everything You Can Give!!!
      • DV 6 months ago
        Bless your heart. And thank you.
      • Reo 6 months ago
        I'm a bit older than you and I'm not the happiest of people either, but I like to help people and I like to help animals. I might be focusing too much on the government and economy these days though.
    • Elisabeth  •  6 months ago
      Depends on the kid, and the day. Yesterday my son thanked me for being his mommy. Just out of the blue. It was sweet and genuine - but I don't think he'll be doing that much when he is 14 - no matter how great a mom I might be. The goal is to have it come full circle and hear a "thanks for being my mom" when he is 30.
      • Carla Dodson 6 months ago
        No, 14 is the age of dissatisfaction, but in a few years, don't worry Mom. You will be the genius who knows all kinds of esoteric grownup things like how to furnish a house on the cheap and what his girlfriends actually want for Christmas...Congratulations, Elisabeth on the loving son.
      • satisfied customer 6 months ago
        disagree, my son recently told me if he could wake up tomorrow and be in a different family he would pick ours... and he is 14, almost 15..and he has been raised in a single parent home for the last 10 years...made me cry
      • Nancy 6 months ago
        You'll hear it again - I heard it when my son was little, then at 16 and again at 21.
    • Evelyn  •  6 months ago
      Living on a continent rife with wars, hunger, drought, diseases and so on, I am grateful for every second for being a ghanaian, for being alive, for waking up every morning (knowing that many were not as lucky as I am). I am thankful for family (though its not the best one around), for the people around me for each one in any small way impacts my life(good or bad), for my job (though it doesnt pay much to save a fly)
      Yes, I am grateful inspite of it not being much. Thankfulness is an attitude one has to adopt by him or herself and has nothing to do with your circumstance in life but everything to do with realizing that no matter your lot in life, you have a lot going for you and others have a lot less and still think themselves blessed.
      • kim 6 months ago
        That is a wonderful attitude, Evelyn. I do not live where you do, but I appreciate your sentiments.
      • Pete 6 months ago
        Yay Evelyn! You have a great attitude.
      • John 6 months ago
        Evelyn is a beautiful soul from what I can gather from her short blurb. She just reminded me of the myriad of things in my life I have to be thankful for. I thank you for that Evelyn may God continue to bless you in your life.
    • JAMES  •  6 months ago
      It always amazes me when my children express that "I love you, Daddy" when I know it was because they are so happy. Life is much sweeter when our children are happy.
      • Kelli 6 months ago
        When my three year old is really excited, all he says is "I love you Mama! I love you Daddy!" It's the sweetest thing ever because you know that's the only way he knows how to express how happy he is. Showing your child that love is happiness is the best way to raise thankful kids. :)
      • A Yahoo! User 6 months ago
        I like to raise my kids with the back of my hand...it helps them learn lifes hard lessons early on...lol.
      • Nathan 6 months ago
        hmm theyre always like that all so nice and always like to give you that warm feeling..til they turn into teenagers and hit puberty-_-
    • lindsay  •  6 months ago
      We pray at bed time and my son starts off his prayer by telling God at least 5 things he is thankful for. We started this routine when he made a comment about not getting something he wanted. He is a child who lacks for nothing, he has so much family that he is literally overflowing with "stuff" so I realized he had no true appreciation for his life and how he is blessed. It didn't take long at all of saying what we're thankful for every day for his attitude to change.
    • Sunday  •  6 months ago
      I am so grateful for my good fortune in life - my family, friends, roof over my head, a JOB - but I can't seem to get my kids to understand how fortunate they are, no matter what I do. They don't get everything they ask for, they know other people who have less, and I make sure they understand how other people in the world live. They see those who are less fortunate around us...it's like it's too disconnected for them, too surreal. It drives me crazy, and I just don't know how to change it. Even if they do manage to display gratitude, it's fleeting.
    • Dataman  •  6 months ago
      That is simply because Gratitude, Joy, Love, Appreciation and Bliss are all different names for the same thing, which is an OUTFLOW. And a very healthy one, at that. It comes from inside, and when you are tuned in, you are present, relaxed, aware, beyond thought, and operating at maximum. The things you love do not make you happy - it is how you feel about them when you regard them that does it. Let your love shine.
    • BE NICE  •  6 months ago
      just be thankful your alive someone somewhere is fighting to survive
    • Compelling  •  6 months ago
      Buddhists know this for over 4,000 years now. In fact, the less you own, the happier you will be.

      Unfortunately, this goes against the materialistic American society we live in.

      That's why we've been idolizing celebrities and athletes who make millions but don't give a hoot about teachers, soldiers, and those who sacrifice for the good of society.

      Maybe this bad economy will straighten us all up.
    • .  •  6 months ago
      Blessed are the givers
    • Anon  •  6 months ago
      I'm grateful for spell check.
    • .  •  6 months ago
      Blessed are the givers.
      Give a small gift to someone in despair and tell them to pay it forward.
      Show you care and you will change someones life
    • SSVME  •  6 months ago
      Give without remembering and take without ever forgetting.....being grateful all your haves and have nots. Sharing (giving) what you are grateful for, fills your soul.
    • E  •  6 months ago
      Sadly, most people need an article like this just before Thanksgiving to remind them to actually give thanks on that one day (forget the rest of the year). It's just another day off to most people.
    • David Magee  •  6 months ago
      I took my kids up to Joplin, MO to volunteer after the tornado. Many people told them how grateful they were to be alive when they were standing in the middle of their destroyed house. Puts things into perspective! The kids still talk about it.
    • Gifted Man  •  6 months ago
      So true, ungrateful kids are alwayys angry and upset. Its really quite simple to show appreciation and be satisfied
    • Tom  •  6 months ago
      I don't mean to sound ungrateful, Piper, (GREAT story) but . . . . can you please start using SPELLCHECK?
    • BeautifullyMe  •  6 months ago
      I am thankful for everything in my life that I have, and everything that I don't have. I have a loving husband, large extended family, three beautiful girls --one on the way-- and a job. I am also thankful that I am able to help out those that are less fortunate this year. My husband and I are by no means rich, and we are thankful that we have enough to live off of with some to help someone else.

      I see that being gratedul, and being positive can help one be healthy!
    • Frank  •  6 months ago
      Always felt better saying "Thank You" than "I Want"......

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