We are in the midst of a global health crisis, a pandemic of epic proportions the likes of which most of us have never seen in our lifetimes. For many, this is a time of increased anxiety as so many things seem out of our control. This may be the perfect time to either increase your practice of gratitude or to start practicing gratitude.
What, you may be asking, is there to be grateful for? If you stop for a moment, there are many things for which you can practice gratitude. Yes, you likely may be practicing social distancing, isolating at home but there in this digital era, there are many ways to stay connected with family and friends including video chats, texting and old-fashioned phone calls. There still is snail mail and our postal workers remain hard at work as of right now, delivering your mail. Be grateful for the chance to reach out to friends, family and loved ones you might normally only think about casually.
We can practice gratitude for the people who continue to report to work including our police officers and firefighters, our doctors and nurses, our plumbers, electricians, mechanics and construction workers. We can practice gratitude for the landscapers who still come to take care of our yards. We can practice gratitude for the city, state and federal workers who continue to make our government run as well as it can during these troubling times. We can practice gratitude for the grocery store workers who are trying to keep the shelves stocked so we may continue to nourish our bodies. We can practice gratitude for the radio disc jockeys who continue to fill our world with music. We can practice gratitude for the bus drivers and train conductors who continue to help us commute to our jobs.
We can practice gratitude for people who are working from home, including our teachers who are posting lessons online, our book publishers who are striving to keep our minds fed, our personal trainers who are posting workouts online, our social workers, therapists, psychologists and psychiatrists who are working to keep our minds healthy. We can practice gratitude for everyone who is choosing to work from home so as to lessen the risk of spreading COVID-19.
We can practice gratitude for our neighbors who are choosing to remain at home, helping to ensure that we may lessen our chances of contracting COVID-19.
Yes, there are many things that are out of our control right now, but you can practice gratitude for the things over which you still have control, including your reaction to what is happening in the world right now. You have the opportunity to choose how you respond to this crisis. You can choose to panic and go out and buy all the cleaning supplies and paper products, or you can choose to respond more calmly and purchase only what you truly need right now. Be grateful that you can choose how to respond to this crisis.
You may feel as though you are stuck at home with your family, your children as they await a possible return to school for the year. You can practice gratitude for the opportunity to spend more time with your family, time you perhaps might not normally have had.
Yes, these are trying times. But you can choose to catastrophize what is happening by panicking, or you can seize this opportunity to practice gratitude for all you continue to have. You can practice gratitude for this time as an opportunity to take better care of yourself, to learn about yourself and to spend more time with your loved ones, learning about them.
If you are struggling with the idea of practicing gratitude, if this situation simply seems too overwhelming, to anxiety-provoking, reach out to a trusted mental health professional. Many counselors, therapists and clinicians continue to take appointments in person, via video chat or by telephone.