Gratitude is the sign of noble souls.
-- Aesop
As August arrives, a certain torpor sets in, prep for fall ensues, raging creativity takes a hiatus and topics warranting a slower, more thoughtful appraisal come to the fore. I'm spending August letting go of being busy but making sure I stay connected to what's important. Fortunately there are those writers whose job it is to keep the rest of us informed, inspired and entertained. David Brooks of The New York Times writing on gratitude is my choice today to keep the creative fires lit for now.
Always interesting, sometimes profound, often totally off the mark but appreciated for his smooth voice, probing prose, jabbing but never wounding style, this is a writer I admire. Even though he lists right too often for me to embrace wholeheartedly, nevertheless a good writer is a good writer and this time he just hits it smack on the nose. Made me happy he has his bully pulpit and even though some violently may disagree with this take on the topic of gratitude, I'm not one of them. Hope you enjoy this re-post of his column.
The Opinion Pages | Op-Ed Columnist
The Structure of Gratitude
JULY 28, 2015
This little phenomenon shows how powerfully expectations structure our moods and emotions, none more so than the beautiful emotion of gratitude.
Gratitude happens when some kindness exceeds expectations, when it is undeserved. Gratitude is a sort of laughter of the heart that comes about after some surprising kindness.
Most people feel grateful some of the time — after someone saves you from a mistake or brings you food during an illness. But some people seem grateful dispositionally. They seem thankful practically all of the time.
These people may have big ambitions, but they have preserved small anticipations. As most people get on in life and earn more status, they often get used to more respect and nicer treatment. But people with dispositional gratitude take nothing for granted. They take a beginner’s thrill at a word of praise, at another’s good performance or at each sunny day. These people are present-minded and hyperresponsive.
This kind of dispositional gratitude is worth dissecting because it induces a mentality that stands in counterbalance to the mainstream threads of our culture. We live in a capitalist meritocracy. This meritocracy encourages people to be self-sufficient — masters of their own fate. But people with dispositional gratitude are hyperaware of their continual dependence on others. They treasure the way they have been fashioned by parents, friends and ancestors who were in some ways their superiors. They’re glad the ideal of individual autonomy is an illusion because if they were relying on themselves they’d be much worse off.
Golden Nuggets of Gratitude by Kris Bishop |
The
basic logic of the capitalist meritocracy is that you get what you pay
for, that you earn what you deserve. But people with dispositional
gratitude are continually struck by the fact that they are given far
more than they pay for — and are much richer than they deserve. Their
families, schools and summer camps put far more into them than they give
back. There’s a lot of surplus goodness in daily life that can’t be
explained by the logic of equal exchange.
Capitalism encourages us to see human beings as self-interested, utility-maximizing creatures. But people with grateful dispositions are attuned to the gift economy where people are motivated by sympathy as well as self-interest. In the gift economy intention matters. We’re grateful to people who tried to do us favors even when those favors didn’t work out. In the gift economy imaginative empathy matters. We’re grateful because some people showed they care about us more than we thought they did. We’re grateful when others took an imaginative leap and put themselves in our mind, even with no benefit to themselves.
Gratitude is also a form of social glue. In the capitalist economy, debt is to be repaid to the lender. But a debt of gratitude is repaid forward, to another person who also doesn’t deserve it. In this way each gift ripples outward and yokes circles of people in bonds of affection. It reminds us that a society isn’t just a contract based on mutual benefit, but an organic connection based on natural sympathy — connections that are nurtured not by self-interest but by loyalty and service. If you think that human nature is good and powerful, then you go around frustrated because the perfect society has not yet been achieved.
"Gratitude is happiness doubled by wonder." |
"Thanks are the highest form of thought...." |
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