Huberman Lab - Essentials: The Science of Gratitude & How to Build a Gratitude Practice
Episode Date: October 23, 2025In this Huberman Lab Essentials episode, I explore the science of gratitude and how to develop an effective, research-supported gratitude practice. I explain why common gratitude practices (like simp...ly listing things you're grateful for) are far less impactful than engaging in story-based gratitude practices. I also explain how being grateful activates specific brain regions, which enhance calm, social connection and motivation, while reducing anxiety and inflammation. Finally, I share why we can't simply trick our brains into feeling grateful and describe a practical weekly gratitude practice that will improve both your mental and physical well-being. Read the episode show notes at hubermanlab.com. Thank you to our sponsors AGZ by AG1: https://drinkagz.com/huberman Eight Sleep: https://eightsleep.com/huberman Our Place: https://fromourplace.com/huberman Timestamps (0:00) Gratitude (0:30) Gratitude Practice Benefits (3:22) Pro-Social vs Defensive Behaviors, Gratitude (6:25) Sponsor: Eight Sleep (8:07) Serotonin, Brain & Context, Gratitude Mindset (14:02) Context, Can You Lie to Yourself? (14:48) Effective Gratitude Practice, Tools: Receiving Gratitude, Story (21:18) Sponsor: AGZ by AG1 (22:47) Tool: Find & Revisit Inspirational Stories (27:30) Heartfelt Intention, Genuine Thanks (29:42) Sponsor: Our Place (31:03) Gratitude Practice Benefits for Anxiety, Fear & Motivation (33:29) Gratitude Practice Benefits for Immune System (36:02) Recap: Establishing an Effective Gratitude Practice Disclaimer & Disclosures Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Welcome to Huberman Lab Essentials, where we revisit past episodes for the most potent and actionable science-based tools for mental health, physical health, and performance.
I'm Andrew Huberman, and I'm a professor of neurobiology and ophthalmology at Stanford School of Medicine.
Today we are talking all about the science of gratitude.
There's now a wealth of data showing that having an effective gratitude practice can impact a huge number of health variables, both mental health and physical health, in positive.
ways. However, in researching this episode, I was completely surprised as to what constitutes an effective gratitude practice. I think like many of you would have thought that an effective gratitude practice simply involves writing down a few things or many things that we're grateful for or thinking about those or really making an effort to somaticize or feel some of the elements of gratitude while writing out that list or thinking about that list. It turns out that in effective gratitude practice,
doesn't resemble that at all.
The neuroimaging data, the physiological data,
looking at things like inflammatory markers,
other studies purely looking at the psychology
and the long and short-term effects
of an effective gratitude practice
point to a completely different approach
to using gratitude to positively impact health metrics.
There are studies showing that performing a gratitude practice
twice or three times or even just once a week
can lead to a pervasive, a long-lasting impact
on subjective well-being.
People report feeling happier, more meaning, joy,
even awe for their life experience,
simply in response to adding a gratitude practice.
But there are additional benefits of a gratitude practice.
There are studies showing that a regular gratitude practice
can provide resilience to trauma in two ways.
It can provide a reframing and resilience
to prior traumatic experiences.
So buffering people against the negative physiological
effects and psychological effects of earlier trauma,
but also inoculating them in many ways
to any traumas that might arrive later in life.
The other thing that a gratitude practice does
is it's been shown to benefit social relationships,
but not just for the relationship in which you express gratitude, right?
So on the face of it, you might think,
okay, if I express gratitude for somebody over and over and over,
over and over and over, then I'm gonna feel better
about that person.
And indeed, that is one effect of a gratitude practice
that's called a pro-social or intersocial gratitude
gratitude practice, but there are now several studies,
recent studies in good journals,
pointing to the fact that a regular gratitude practice
can also enhance one's social relationships
across the board in the workplace at school,
with family and romantic relationships,
and even one's relationship to themselves,
which is really what the subjective feelings of well-being are.
And for those of you that are coming to this conversation
thinking gratitude practice, oh, that's kind of wishy-washy
or woo, it's gonna involve putting your hand on your heart
and feeling into all the amazing things,
things that you happen to have,
even when things are really terrible,
that's not where we're going at all.
So if you are of the mindset that a gratitude practice
is kind of weak sauce, buckle up
because the data actually point to the fact
that a gratitude practice is a very, very potent way
in which you can steer your mental and physical health
in positive directions and that those effects
are very long lasting.
Before we dive into the tools and mechanisms
and scientific studies around gratitude,
I'd like to just set the framework for the discussion.
Gratitude is what we can,
call a pro-social behavior or a pro-social mindset.
Pro-social behaviors are basically any behavior
or mode of thinking that allow us to be more effective
in interactions with other people, including ourselves.
Now pro-social is not just a name
that we give these different tools and practices and mindsets.
They're actually neural circuits in the brain
that are specifically wired for pro-social thoughts and behaviors.
So without getting into too much detail just yet,
We will later.
We have circuits in the brain that are what we call a peditive.
They are designed to bring us closer to things
and to bring us into closer relation
to the details of that sensory experience.
Now, that could be a delicious food that you're eating.
It could be interacting with a loved one.
It could be interacting with a friend or anyone that you happen to like.
It could even be in your relation to yourself.
And the neural circuits in the brain
that are associated with aversive or defensive behaviors
are actually antagonized, meaning
they are reduced when the pro-social circuits are more active.
So the framework here that I'd like to set
is that we have this kind of seesaw of neural circuits
in the brain, one set that are pro-social
and are designed to bring us closer to others,
including ourselves, closer to certain sensory experiences,
right? Because a lot of pro-social behaviors
can also be geared towards things like pets or food
or anything that we find we want to be closer to
and want more of.
Whereas the defensive circuits involve areas of the
brain, yes, such as areas that are involved in fear, but also areas of the brain and body
that are literally associated with freezing or with backing up. So the way to think about
gratitude is that falls under this category of pro-social behaviors, which are designed to bring
us closer to different types of things and to enhance the level of detail that we extract from
those experiences. The key thing for today's discussion is that gratitude turns out to be one of the
most potent wedges by which we can insert our thinking,
and as you also see, the physiology of our body,
between these two circuits and give a little more levity,
if you will, to the side of the seesaw
that's associated with positive pro-social feelings.
And if you keep imagining this seesaw imagery,
what's really beautiful about gratitude practices
is that if they're performed repeatedly,
and not even that often, but repeatedly,
then one can actually
shift their neural circuits such that the seesaw that I'm calling pro-social versus defensive
behaviors can actually start to tilt. What this means is that we now know with certainty
that a regular gratitude practice can shift the pro-social circuit so that they dominate
our physiology and our mindset in ways that can enhance many, many aspects of our physical
and mental health by default. So we don't always have to constantly be in practice trying to be
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Now I'd like to talk about some of the neurochemistry and neural circuits associated
with gratitude and pro-social behaviors.
Numerous times on this podcast, I've talked about so-called neuromodulators.
For those of you that might have forgotten or have never heard of neuromodulators before,
or neuromodulators are chemicals that are released
in the brain and body that change the activity
of other neural circuits.
They make certain brain areas more likely to be active
and other brain areas less likely to be active.
These neuromodulators have names like dopamine, serotonin,
acetycholine, epinephrine, and so on.
The main neuromodulators associated with gratitude
and prosocial behaviors tends to be serotonin.
Serotonin is released from a very small collection
of neurons in the brain
stem called the raffae are a P-H-E, the raffa nucleus,
and a few other places in the brain.
And the raffa neurons send these little wires
that we call axons out to numerous places in the brain.
And they tend to increase the activity
of particular neural circuits that lend themselves
to more approach to particular types of experiences.
That makes total sense if you think about it.
Have a chemical that under certain circumstances
released in the brain that
triggers the activity of neural circuits
that makes the organism you more likely to stay
in an interaction with something
or even lean in and seek a more detailed interaction
with that person place or thing.
And two main brain areas are activated
by these serotonergic systems
and when people experience something
that makes them feel gratitude
and the amount of activation scales
with how intensely the person experienced
the feeling of gratitude.
And those two areas have particular names.
You don't need to know the names,
but for those of you that want to know,
they are the anterior cingulate cortex
and the medial prefrontal cortex.
And of course, these brain areas are connected
to a number of other networks in the brain.
In fact, that's how they get you or others
to lean into certain experiences
because when these areas are active,
certain thought processes get invoked.
Those thought processes probably resemble something like,
hmm, I'd like to experience more of this
this feels really good.
And then they literally feed onto your muscles
via the neurons, making you happy to stay stationary
if you're experiencing something you like
or to move closer to something
that you find attractive to you, literally.
Many of you have probably heard of the medial prefrontal cortex
because this is the area of the brain
that is involved in planning and in deep thinking
and evaluation of different types of experiences,
past, present or future.
And the reason it can be involved in so many different things
and the reason it's especially important for gratitude
is that medial prefrontal cortex sets context, okay?
It sets context and it literally defines the meaning
of your experience.
How is it that medial prefrontal cortex
sets the context of everything in your life?
Well, it does it the following way.
You have a number of circuits deeper in your brain
that simply create some sensations
or they allow you, I should say, to perceive,
certain sensations.
Let's use the example of cold exposure,
something that we'd sometimes talk about
in this podcast for other reasons.
If you were to deliberately place yourself
into an ice bath, it would be uncomfortable.
Even if you're adapted to cold and so forth,
the discomfort is non-negotiable.
However, if you are doing it because you want to
or because you have knowledge
that there are particular health benefits,
the medial prefrontal cortex
can then control areas of your deeper brain
like the hypothalamus to positively impact
the neurochemicals that are released into your system.
Your knowledge that you are making the choice,
that it's you that's deciding
to put yourself through this discomfort,
has been shown to create a very different
and positive effect on things like dopamine,
on things like anti-inflammatory markers
in your immune system, et cetera,
compared to,
if someone pushes you into an ice bath,
or if you are doing it because someone insists
that you do it and you really, really don't want to.
So there's a very subtle distinction here.
It's just the distinction of motivation and desire
or lack of motivation and being forced into something.
If you take a mouse, for instance,
and it runs on a running wheel,
which mice really like to do,
there are many positive effects on reducing blood pressure,
improvements in neurochemistry, et cetera,
in that mouse.
However, if there's,
There's a mouse in the cage right next to it
that's trapped in the running wheel
and it has to run every time the other mouse runs
because the wheels are linked.
Well then the second mouse that's forced
to do the exact same running experiences negative shifts
in their overall health metrics.
Blood pressure goes up, stress hormones go up, et cetera
because it's not actually making the choice.
Medial prefrontal cortex is the knob,
or the switch rather, that can take one experience
and allow us to frame it such
that it creates positive health effects.
And the exact same experience framed
as something we don't want to do
or that we are forced to do
can create negative health effects.
Now, how exactly the neurons
and medial prefrontal cortex do that
is rather complicated
and frankly, not completely understood.
But it's somehow able to adjust the activity
of other neural circuits
that are purely reflexive,
as we say in neuroscience,
like really dumb neural circuits
that are just like switches
and place a context onto it.
So gratitude,
is a mindset that activates prefrontal cortex
and in doing so, sets the context of your experience
such that you can derive tremendous health benefits,
which leads us to the question,
what kind of gratitude practice is going to accomplish this?
You can't simply lie to yourself.
You can't simply say, oh, well, every experience
is a learning experience.
Or a terrible thing that happens, oh, good.
I'm just gonna say, good.
and that your body will react as if it's good for you.
That's a myth.
And frankly, it's a myth that's fairly pervasive
in the self-help and self-actualization literature.
We can't simply lie to ourselves
or quote unquote fake it until we make it.
Neural circuitry is very powerful and very plastic.
It can be modified and it's very context dependent,
but it's not stupid.
And when you lie to yourself about whether or not
an experience is actually good for you or not,
your brain knows.
So what does an effect?
gratitude practice look like?
Well, let's examine what an ineffective,
what a poor gratitude practice looks like
because therein lies some really important information,
including the fact that I and I think
millions of other people out there
are doing it wrong.
Most gratitude practices that you see online
and that people talk about in various talks
and so forth involve something like writing down
or reciting or reciting
We're thinking about five or 10 or three or 20 things
that you're especially grateful for.
And then really trying to feel into some of those,
really try and think deeply about the emotions,
the sensations, the perceptions that are associated
with those particular people, places, and things on your list.
Most studies actually point to the fact
that that style of gratitude practice
is not particularly effective,
in shifting your neural circuitry,
your neural chemistry,
or your somatic circuitry,
the circuits in your body,
because you literally have organs
and neural circuits that are connected,
the circuits of your brain and body
toward enhanced activation of prefrontal cortex,
enhanced activation of these pro-social neural networks
that we were talking about earlier.
Turns out that the most potent form of gratitude practice
is not a gratitude practice
where you give gratitude or express
gratitude, but rather where you receive gratitude, where you receive thanks.
And this to me was very surprising.
There are a number of studies about this now.
One in particular that I think is interesting is called prefrontal activation while listening
to a letter of gratitude read aloud by a coworker face-to-face, a NIRS study, NIRS.
I'll explain what all this means.
You now know what the prefrontal activation part is.
This is activation of the prefrontal cortex.
The NIRS study, that's just a technical term.
So in this particular experiment, what they did
is they had coworkers write a letter of gratitude
of thanks to another coworker, unbeknownst to the other coworker.
And then they sat down together
and then they imaged brain activity
as this letter was being read
and as the letter was being heard, received.
And it showed very robust effects
on these prefrontal networks
that pointed to the fact that receiving gratitude
is actually much more potent in terms of the positive,
shifts that it can create than giving gratitude.
For many people who want to experience
the positive effects of gratitude,
it's probably not the most advantageous approach
to just sit around waiting,
hoping that someone's going to deliver
all these letters or words of gratitude.
How is it that you can create that sense
of receiving gratitude for yourself
and thereby derive the effects of gratitude
as outlined in this particular study?
And there we go to the important work
of the great Antonio Demosio,
who explored these neural correlates of gratitude
to define the areas of the brain
that are associated with pro-social behaviors
like the prefrontal cortex.
What they did was interesting,
rather than have people express gratitude,
they had the subjects go into the scanner,
so their brains are being imaged,
and they watched narratives, stories
about other people experiencing positive things in their life.
And in this case, these were powerful,
stories. These were stories about survivors of genocide. So that's what they're watching.
The subjects were subjects that were not survivors of genocide. So they were watching these
videotapes of people that had survived genocide and had people help them along the way as part
of their story of survival, either psychological and or obviously they survived long enough
to make the video or physical survival. So within these stories, there was a conveyance of a lot
of struggle, these people talked about the horrible situations they were in, but also small
but highly significant features of their history that had led to their own feelings of gratitude.
So for instance, you know, it says a woman at the image, this is literally from the scientific
paper, you know, somebody had been sick for weeks.
So the woman's describing how she'd been sick for weeks.
And then another prisoner who was a doctor finds a particular medicine somehow, it doesn't
describe how and literally saves her life.
So these sorts of stories.
Now, just hearing this in the context
of nothing but a scientific paper and discussion,
these probably aren't that impactful,
what's really important about this study
and is really important for all of us to know
is that these stories of other people receiving things
that were powerful for them in their life trajectory
is embedded in story.
And the human brain especially is so oriented towards story.
We have neural,
circuits that like to link together past, present, future, have different characters,
protagonists and antagonists from the time we're very young until the time we're very old.
Story is one of the major ways that we organize information in the brain. There does seem to be
storytelling and story listening circuits in the brain. So what's important is not simply that
these people survive genocide. That's obviously important and wonderful. But it's not just
that they were helped along the way. It's that the description of their help is in big.
get it in a larger story.
So the human subject in this scientific study
is watching these powerful stories.
And the neural circuits associated
with pro-social behaviors and with gratitude
become robustly active
when they start to feel some affiliation
with the person telling the story.
So if you think about the earlier study
that receiving gratitude is the most powerful way
to activate these circuits for gratitude,
the subjects in this study in many ways
are receiving a serious
sense of gratitude, but through the narrative
of one of these other subjects, which I find fascinating.
You know, I would have thought a great gratitude practice
would be sit down and list out all the things
you're grateful for.
That just seems so logical to me,
but it turns out that these neural circuits don't work that way,
that to really activate these circuits for gratitude
and the serotonin and probably the oxytocin system as well
and its prefrontal networks,
one has to powerfully associate
with the idea of receiving help,
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So let's just take a moment and start to think about how we are going to build out the ultimate gratitude practice, meaning the most effective gratitude practice for us to do because of all the many positive effects that an effective gratitude practice can have if it's the proper one.
It's very clear that receiving gratitude is powerful, but it's also very clear that waiting around to receive that gratitude is an impractical approach.
What we know for sure is that there has to be a real experience.
of somebody else's experience,
and that the best way to do that is story.
So in thinking about how to build out
an effective gratitude practice,
it's very worthwhile, I believe,
to find someone's narrative that's powerful for you.
In many ways to think about this is,
it's gotta be a story that inspires you
because of the, for lack of a better phrase,
the beauty of the human spirit or the ability
humans to help other humans.
And I find this remarkable because what this really means
is that the circuits for gratitude are such
that we can exchange gratitude.
We can actually observe someone else getting help,
someone else giving help, and that observation
of our species doing that for one another
allows us to experience the feeling
of a genuine chemical and neural circuit activation lift,
if you will, very, very different
than simply writing out the things
that you're thankful for, right?
And so how would you do this?
Well, people digest story in a number of different ways.
People watch movies, people listen to podcasts,
people read books.
There are a tremendous number of stories out there.
It's clear that an effective gratitude practice
has to be repeated from time to time.
So what I would not suggest is that we build a protocol
in which you're constantly foraging
for inspirational stories over
and over again.
Rather, the most effective protocol or tool
is going to be either to think into,
and you could write this out if you like,
but think into when somebody was thankful
for something that you did
and really start to think about how you felt
in receiving that gratitude,
or, and or I should say,
imagining or thinking about deeply
the emotional experience of somebody else receiving help.
I wanna emphasize that
The story that you select does not have to have
any semblance to your own life experience
is just about what happens to move you.
And so the way that one could do this
is to find a story that's particularly meaningful for you
and then to just take some short notes,
bullet point notes, just list out for instance,
you know, what the struggle was,
what the help was,
and something about how that impacts you emotionally.
You've written down a few notes about what that story is.
is just to remind you, and then you read those out
and you think into the richness of that experience,
that receiving of gratitude.
Now, this could be done literally for one minute
or two minutes or three minutes.
This is not an extensively long practice.
Now, if you have an experience of receiving gratitude
or a story that's very potent for you,
it becomes a sort of shortcut into the gratitude network,
these pro-social networks,
meaning the activation of these circuits
becomes almost instantaneous.
And that's very different than a lot of other
practices out there. Now, there's another very clear and positive effect of using this narrative or
story-based approach to a gratitude practice. And that's what story does for our physiology.
What this means for your gratitude practice is that having a story that you return to over and over
again, even if it's not the entire story, you're just using the shorthand bullet point version of your
story, will create a perceptible and real shift in, you know,
your heartbeat and in your breathing.
And actually that's been demonstrated over and over now
that an effective gratitude practice
is one that can rapidly shift,
not just the activation of these circuits in your brain
for pro-social behaviors,
but also activation of particular circuits
in your heart and in your lungs
and the other organs of your body
such that you can get into a reproducible state
of gratitude each time.
The key thing is that you want to use the same
story, even if it's your own experience or somebody else's,
and keep coming back to it over and over again.
That makes it a very potent tool
that you can get a tremendous amount of benefit from
with even as short as 60 seconds of practice.
Earlier I talked about how you can't lie to yourself
and say, you know, I'm so grateful for this thing
that I actually hate.
There's a really interesting studies published
in scientific reports, which is a nature research journal.
The title of it is Neural Responses to Intention,
and benefit appraisal are critical
in distinguishing gratitude and joy.
It's a somewhat complicated study,
so I'm just going to hit on some of the high points.
But basically what they did
is they used functional magnetic resonance imaging
so they could look at brain circuitry activation
with very high precision.
And they had people receiving money
in the context of this experiment.
And they had some knowledge as to whether or not
the money that they were receiving
was given to them wholeheartedly.
or reluctantly.
They looked at whether or not the sense of gratitude
scaled with the amount of money received
and or the intention of the benefactor,
whether or not the person giving the money
was doing it wholeheartedly or reluctantly.
And what's remarkable is that while the amount of money given
was a strong component in whether or not somebody felt
that they had received gratitude, which may
sense, you know, the amount of money is some metric of whether or not somebody feels thanked.
The stronger variable, the bigger impact came from whether or not the person giving the money
was giving it with a wholehearted intention and not a reluctant intention.
This tells us many things that extend way beyond gratitude practices, which is that genuine
thanks are what count.
So this constrains our gratitude practices somewhat,
but I think in an interesting and important way,
you can't tell yourself that an experience was great
or that, you know, I got a lot of money
and therefore it justified it,
even though I think that they give it to me reluctantly
or my boss hates me, but they gave me a raise.
And that tells us that if we are the giver
that we better be giving wholeheartedly
or we are undermining the sense of gratitude
that someone is going to receive from us.
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So we are gradually building up the ultimate gratitude practice
based on the variety of scientific literature
that's out there.
And I know that many people are probably interested
in developing a gratitude practice
that has long lasting,
maybe even permanent positive effects
on their neural circuitry.
So with that in mind,
I wanna turn our attention to a really interesting study.
It's entitled, Effects of Gratitude Meditation
on neural network functional connectivity
and brain heart coupling.
And to make a long story short
and a lot simpler than that,
title, repeated gratitude practice changes the way
that your brain circuits work.
And it also changes the way in which your heart
and your brain interact.
You're familiar with the fact that your brain controls your heart
because you can be stressed about something
that's perceived with your brain
and then your heart rate will speed up.
You're probably also familiar with the fact
that if your heart rate speeds up
for some reason or no reason, you're probably thinking,
well, what's making my heart rate speed up?
That's because the brain and the heart
are reciprocally innervated as we,
we say, they're talking to one another in both directions.
It's a two-way highway.
This study looked at changes in so-called functional connectivity
within the brain and between the brain and the heart.
In response to gratitude practices,
to make a long story short, what they found
is that a repeated gratitude practice
could change the resting state functional connectivity
in emotion and motivation-related brain regions.
If I haven't mentioned a strong enough incentive
for doing a regular gratitude practice
until now, this is definitely the one to pay attention to.
Because what they found was a regular gratitude practice
could shift the functional connectivity of emotion pathways
in ways that made anxiety and fear circuits
less likely to be active and circuits for feelings of well-being,
but also motivation to be much more active.
I find that remarkable and important
because a number of people struggle with issues of motivation.
A lot of people who are highly motivated,
also have issues with anxiety and fear.
And so this study really points to the fact
that it's a two-fer.
If you have a good gratitude practice
and you repeat it regularly,
you reduce the fear anxiety circuits,
you increase the efficacy of the positive emotion,
feel-good circuits,
and the circuits associated with motivation
and pursuit are actually enhanced as well.
Thus far, we've mainly talked about the effects
of gratitude on neural circuit activation and changes.
A little bit about some of the changes
that are happening in terms of the body,
heart rate and breathing and so forth,
but we haven't talked a lot yet
about the changes in health metrics,
in things like inflammation or reductions in inflammation,
and immunity and things of that sort.
So with that in mind, I'd like to describe
the results of a really interesting recent study
that was published in the journal Brain Behavior and Immunity.
This was published 2021.
The title of this of the study is exploring neural mechanisms
of the health benefits of gratitude in women,
a randomized control trial,
first author is Haslett.
And basically what this paper showed was that women
who had a regular gratitude practice
of the sort that we've been talking about up until now
showed reductions in amygdala activity,
a brain area associated with threat detection,
a intimate part of the fear network in the brain.
So reductions in amygdala activation
and large reductions in the production
of something called TNN.
TNF alpha, tumor necrosis factor alpha,
and IL6, interleukin 6.
Now, if you happen to have listened to the episode
that I did on activating your immune system
and immune function, you heard about TNF alpha and IL6.
TNF alpha and IL6 are inflammatory cytokines.
These are chemicals that exist in your body
and that are released from cells
when there is damage or kind of a systemic stress,
when your system is in duress.
And in the short,
term, they can be beneficial.
They can call in signals for wound healing
and repair of cells, et cetera.
But you don't want TNF alpha and IL6 levels to be too high
and you don't want those levels to be up for too long.
And so this study is really nice
because they showed significant effects
in reducing TNF alpha and IL6
in response to a gratitude practice.
And another interesting aspect of this study
is that the reductions in amygdala activation
and the reductions in TNF alpha and IL6
were very rapid.
They occurred almost immediately
after the gratitude practice was completed.
And even though that study was performed
exclusively on female subjects,
based on the biology and circuitry of the amygdala
and the biology of TNF Alpha and IL-6
performing this inflammatory role in both men and women,
I don't see any reason why the results of that study
wouldn't pertain to both men and women.
I'd like to just highlight the key elements
of the most effective,
at least of my knowledge, gratitude practice.
First of all, that practice has to be grounded
in a narrative, meaning a story.
You don't have to recite or hear that story
every single time you do the gratitude practice,
but you have to know what that story was
and what the gratitude practice references back to.
Second of all, that story can be one of you receiving genuine thanks.
And the key elements there
are that you are the one receiving the thanks,
the gratitude, and that it's being given to you genuinely, wholeheartedly.
Or it can be a story of you observing someone else receiving thanks or expressing thanks.
And that has to be a genuine interaction as well, both between the giver and the receiver.
So those are the first three elements.
What I recommend would be after you've established the story that you want to use for your
gratitude practice, that you write down three or four simple bullet points that can serve as
salient reminders of that story for you. It will serve as kind of a cue for that story without
having to listen to or talk out the entire story. I would recommend writing down something about
the state that you or the other person were in before they received the gratitude, the state
that you were in or that the person was in after they received the gratitude, and any
other elements that lend some sort of emotional weight or tone to the story. This could be three
pages of text if you like, or it could just be a couple of bullet points. I don't think it really
matters. The important thing is that it's embedded in your memory and that it's really associated
with this genuine exchange of thanks and the receivable of thanks. I think those are the key
elements. And then it's very simple. The entire practice involves reading off these bullet points
as a cue to your nervous system of this sense of gratitude.
And then for about one minute,
which is a trivial amount of time,
if you really think about it,
or maybe two minutes,
or if you're really ambitious, up to five minutes,
of just really feeling into that genuine experience
of having received gratitude or observed someone else receiving gratitude.
So if we just take a step back from this protocol
and compare it to what's typically out there in the literature,
which is,
you know, make a list of all the things you're thankful for,
recite in your mind, all the things you're thankful for,
count your blessings.
So I think everybody should be counting their blessings all the time.
There's always something to be thankful for.
But in terms of a scientifically grounded gratitude practice
that is also scientifically demonstrated
to shift your physiology at the level of your immune system
and your neural circuitry, reducing anxiety, increasing motivation,
all these wonderful things that so many of us
are chasing all the time as goals,
I think a gratitude practice reveals itself
to be an immensely powerful tool.
Thank you for your time and attention today,
learning about the science of gratitude.
And last but certainly not least,
thank you for your interest in science.
