In today's episode, we'll explore why it is so important to be thankful for.
Speaker AWell, you welcome to More Human, More Kind, the podcast helping parents of LGBTQ kids move from fear to fierce allyship and feel less alone and more informed so you can protect what matters, raise brave kids, and spark collective change.
Speaker AI'm Heather Hester.
Speaker ALet's get Started.
Speaker AThanksgiving teaches us to be grateful for everything and everyone except ourselves.
Speaker AToday, we're rewriting that story because the gratitude you offer others is incomplete without you.
Speaker ABy the end of this episode, you'll understand why self directed gratitude rewires your brain for resilience and why your nervous system needs it.
Speaker ANow more than ever, you will identify where your gratitude list leaves you out of the equation and how to gently bring yourself back into that circle of care.
Speaker AAnd you'll learn a simple three minute ritual that helps you anchor appreciation in your body, not just your mind, especially during emotionally complex season seasons.
Speaker AWelcome to More Human, More Kind.
Speaker AI'm Heather Hester.
Speaker AThis week, as so many of us in the US Prepare for Thanksgiving with all of its history, complexity, beauty and chaos, I want to shift the conversation.
Speaker AInstead of talking about what we're grateful for, I want to explore the gratitude.
Speaker AWe almost never name the gratitude for ourselves.
Speaker ASomewhere between caring for everyone else and keeping life moving, we forget that we too deserve to be appreciated.
Speaker AToday, we're reclaiming that.
Speaker AWe are taught to be thankful for things for our families, for our health, for our for our jobs.
Speaker ABut rarely do we direct that gratitude to ourselves.
Speaker AWe say things like I am grateful for my kids.
Speaker AI am grateful for my partner.
Speaker AI am grateful for my home, but not I'm grateful to myself for showing up when it was hard.
Speaker AWe talk a lot about the importance of having a gratitude practice.
Speaker AThe benefits range from simple grounding to shifting our mindset from lack to plenty, to manifesting our hopes and dreams for the future by stating gratitude for those manifestations.
Speaker ANow, how many times in that practice do we include ourselves?
Speaker AAnd going just a few layers deeper, how honest or authentic are we in our gratitude?
Speaker AHere's the truth that we do not talk about enough.
Speaker AA lot of gratitude that we see publicly or online is curated.
Speaker AA highlight reel, a performance.
Speaker AA list we believe we should write rather than what we genuinely feel.
Speaker AAuthentic gratitude is something else entirely.
Speaker AAuthentic gratitude includes the joy and the ache, the wins and the wounds, the resilience you didn't choose but you built anyway, the ways you grew even when you didn't want to, the people who held you and the person who kept going?
Speaker AYou.
Speaker AAuthentic gratitude isn't shiny, it's honest.
Speaker AIt's the kind that lets you say, I'm grateful for my family, and I'm also grateful I survived a really hard year.
Speaker AI'm grateful for my child's identity and grateful for how much I've unlearned to love them better.
Speaker AI'm grateful for joy, but also grateful for the clarity that came through grief.
Speaker AGratitude doesn't erase what hurt or hurts, it sits beside it.
Speaker AIn fact, researchers at Berkeley's Greater Good Science center note that gratitude is most powerful in complex emotional landscapes, not imperfect ones.
Speaker AIt's the coexistence of gratitude and grief, gratitude and uncertainty, gratitude and exhaustion that creates emotional authenticity and stability.
Speaker AAuthentic gratitude says this year didn't break me, it shaped me.
Speaker AOn a really personal note, my gratitude practice that I started way back when Connor was away is the practice that helped keep me grounded and strong during the scariest days.
Speaker AIt allowed me to come back to center to anchor in what was true, not all of the very real, scary situations that were happening.
Speaker AThe fear and the overwhelm that at that time exposed every shadow, every one of my frayed nerves and kept my nervous system in the most activated state of dysregulation.
Speaker ATaking those few moments every day to write I am grateful for both the present and the future not only saved me, but also helped me grow and evolve in ways I never would have thought possible.
Speaker AStudies from UC Davis show that regular gratitude practice increases optimism and sleep quality, but follow up research from Harvard Health adds a nuance.
Speaker AGratitude that includes self compassion strengthens emotional regulation far more than external gratitude alone.
Speaker AIn other words, thanking yourself changes your chemistry.
Speaker ASo maybe the missing name on your gratitude list is your own.
Speaker AIf this feels just completely foreign, let's just take a moment to practice.
Speaker ASo if you are in a place where you can just take a minute, take a breath, I want you to take one deep inhale.
Speaker AAnd one slow exhale.
Speaker ANow, either in your mind or out loud, name three moments this week when you showed care for others or yourself.
Speaker AAnd then say aloud, I am grateful to myself for and finish the sentence.
Speaker AThis practice isn't arrogance, it's acknowledgement.
Speaker AThe nervous system reads it as safety.
Speaker AWe'll get to the rest of the episode in a moment, but if you like this show, please make sure to subscribe.
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Speaker ASo going back to gratitude, I will be honest.
Speaker AThe first handful of times I tried this, it felt awkward.
Speaker AAnd honestly, a little self serving, even insincere, as a former people pleaser, one who had no clue what a boundary was and thought my purpose was to make sure I contorted myself to ensure the comfort and happiness of everyone else around me.
Speaker AThis was a really extremely uncomfortable practice, but I kept at it, sprinkling it in with my other gratitude for people, places, hopes, big dreams.
Speaker AAnd after a time I realized I had been starving for my own appreciation, for recognizing me and saying thank you to me.
Speaker AAnd that's the moment that gratitude became nourishment.
Speaker ABefore we close today, I want to offer you a tiny act of kindness.
Speaker ASomething so simple that you can do it in less than 30 seconds.
Speaker APlace one hand over your heart and take a slow breath in and out, similar to what we just did.
Speaker ANow.
Speaker AThis time I want you to whisper to yourself.
Speaker AI'm doing a good job.
Speaker AI'm doing a good job.
Speaker ANot perfect, not better than last year, just a good job.
Speaker AAnd let that land, let it soften something inside of you.
Speaker AMost of us are starving for the kindness we so freely give to everyone else.
Speaker AAnd hearing your own voice offer gentleness to your nervous system is powerful because it cues safety, it quiets shame, and it builds emotional resilience from the inside out.
Speaker AThis is your reminder.
Speaker AKindness begins at home inside your own body.
Speaker ASo today's quick, unlearned segment is this.
Speaker AThe myth says that gratitude means ignoring what's hard.
Speaker ALet's reframe that to gratitude and grief can coexist.
Speaker AOne doesn't cancel out the other.
Speaker AIn fact, gratitude in the middle of the mess is often where it is most potent and most real.
Speaker ATonight, write one sentence that begins, even in the mess I'm thankful for and finish the sentence.
Speaker AWhen we unlearn performative gratitude, we rediscover grace for ourselves and for everyone else around us.
Speaker AAs we wrap up today's reflection, take one last, slow, generous breath.
Speaker AThe kind you rarely give yourself.
Speaker AYou give so much to your family, your work, your community.
Speaker AMy hope is that something in today's reflection allowed you to turn a bit of that generosity inward, to remember that you deserve to be on your own gratitude list.
Speaker AAs you move into the holiday season, whether you are surrounded by loved ones, navigating complicated family dynamics, or finding quiet space for yourself, I hope that you carry the following truth with you.
Speaker AGratitude is not something you give away at the expense of yourself.
Speaker AIt is something you offer from the fullness of who you are becoming.
Speaker ANew episodes of more human, more kind drop every Tuesday and Friday and if you are ready to release fear, shame or outdated patterns in your life.
Speaker AI'm accepting a few private clients right now.
Speaker AYou can learn more @morehuman more kind.com until next time, Be gentle, be honest, and be beautifully, courageously human.