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Can Gratitude Stall Healing? Yes, When It’s Forced!

By Teresa Beshwate November 13, 2023 Mindset

As a life coach for widows, I often talk with people who are using gratitude against themselves. Self-inflicted, forced gratitude is how many people attempt to kick themselves into a better emotional state. It isn’t effective, and for good reasons.

For starters, most of us are just not good at feeling bad.

Most people are never taught that it’s okay to feel difficult or negative emotions. In fact, we are often talked out of them as children.

“Don’t worry.” “Don’t feel sad.” “Don’t be nervous.”

Many people grow up thinking that it’s not normal or acceptable to feel negatively; that life is somehow supposed to be a bowl of cherries at all times. So, if difficult emotions are perceived as abnormal, then we certainly don’t learn how to deal with them.

Without the ability to process difficult emotions, we reach for a buffer in an effort to temporarily soothe the discomfort: alcohol, food, drugs, social media, over-scheduling, over-working, Amazon, and Netflix are just a few examples, each with its own consequence.

Life Throws Curveballs

When a seismic event of a lifetime shakes us to the core, it levels everything that was once normal, predictable, and safe in our lives.

No matter the curveball, many people are grieving something. Any previous negative emotion likely pales in comparison. Like never before, we reach for our buffer-of-choice to try to dull the pain, at least momentarily, and despite the consequences.

Gratitude Can Be a Weapon

We also try to talk ourselves out of difficult emotions. This is where gratitude comes into play. If we have many other blessings, we somehow think that we’re not allowed to feel short-changed.

We don’t want to wallow in our grief, so we shame ourselves into gratitude. “At least I haven’t lost my job.”

We count blessings instead of feel feelings. We fake it, thinking that eventually we will “make it.”

Well intended platitudes offer up gratitude as an antidote to grief. “At least you had so many years together.”

We don’t feel entitled to our feelings of grief, so we kick ourselves with gratitude.

Forced Gratitude Stalls Healing

Gratitude is often a useful feeling, but not when used against ourselves. We can count millions of blessings and still feel robbed of what matters most.

It’s okay to have enjoyed three decades together but still mourn for the two more you had planned. It’s also okay to have enjoyed the most wonderful vacations and still be angry when a trip is cancelled. Finally, it’s okay to feel both grateful and cheated at the same time.

When we force thoughts of gratitude, we sweep the pain of loss under the rug. By forcing ourselves to count blessings, we resist the difficult emotions. And what we resist, persists.

There Is a Simple Solution

The most efficient way through grief is straight through. That means feeling the difficult emotions that come with the territory. Processing each feeling as it comes is a simple yet profound tool. Here are seven simple steps:

#1 Allow the difficult feeling to be there without reaching for an escape button or buffer.

#2 Name it (is it sadness, stress, regret, anxiety?).

#3 Notice where in the body you feel it. Does it move or stay in one place?

#4 Describe it. Is it heavy, fluttery, pulsing, or something else?

#5 If it had a color, what would it be?

#6 Breathe it in and observe how it changes over time. As it changes slightly, repeat the steps above.

#7 Be courageous enough to be fully present with the feeling until it loosens its grip even slightly.

Basic Human Experience

Feeling the wide range of emotions is, after all, the most authentic human experience. “The deeper that sorrow carves into your being, the more joy you can contain,” wrote Kahlil Gibran in The Prophet.

With practice, we can learn to feel the difficult feelings as they come. We relinquish the need for buffers because we are courageous enough to feel any feeling. We can then more fully appreciate the positive emotions too, including the most genuine feelings of gratitude.

Let’s Have a Conversation:

What have you grieved this year? Did you try to not feel your grief? Have you tried to count your blessings instead? And how do you feel now? Has forced gratitude robbed you of true gratitude? Please share your thoughts with the community.

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Jenyce Jiggetts

This is an excellent article.

I give myself permission to be depressed, sad or whatever when I need to and sometimes I just wallow in it and dare anyone to tell me everything’s going to be all right or to get out with friends, etc. :)

Since it’s not clinical depression I know that eventually I’ll be alright but at the time I’m in it.

Pauline Probert

I had reconnected with my first love after my first husband had died, and we had a wonderful six years together before he passed away quickly from cancer complications, I feel so much more cheated this time, I had a long & happy marriage with my first husband and he died slowly over 3 years also with cancer, but somehow although I grieved his loss it sort of felt like our time was completed, But this time I feel like I have been robbed, and I try to swallow those feelings with gratitude thoughts. Thanks for your much needed article.

Barbara

Beautifully said.

Stephanie Bryant

Loss of the love of my life from ALS and Frontal Lobe Dementia. He became abusive. I dealt with it because it wasn’t his fault and he had instances of his love for me. I had to save my mental a physical health so we finally separated. He’s got a slow progression type unfortunately. He’ll be miserable and angry until he dies. Of course it’s all my fault! I’m grieving the loss of the man I married not the monster he became.

Barbara

My husband died from Lewy body dementia. It was so difficult too. He was 66 years. Thinking of you and sending prayers.

APG

“Gratitude” has become middle-aged cliche. If counting your blessings is comforting, by all means go for it! If not, then don’t feel inadequate. Also know that grief study focuses on death, or binary events. In fact, grief for many people is a long and slow train ride. It has no ending.

The Author

Teresa Amaral Beshwate, MPH, is an author and life coach who exclusively helps widows to move forward and learn to live and love their life again after the loss of their spouse. Her latest book, Life Reconstructed: A Widow’s Guide to Coping with Grief, is now available.

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