“Gratitude is not only the greatest of virtues, but the parent of all others.” -Cicero
The fall harvest is a traditional time of year to take stock of the good things in our lives. As the sages have long told us, focusing on what we have rather than what we lack can make life that much richer and better
According to social science, that wisdom is right on the money. Expressing gratitude not only helps you feel like you have more — it can actually improve your finances.
What’s that? Emotions can be good for our wallets?
A 2014 academic study by researchers from Northeastern University, the University of California and Harvard Kennedy School dealing with the EMOTIONAL IMPACT ON JUDGMENT AND DECISION MAKING set out to see how various emotions affect our behavior with money. More specifically, researchers wanted to see if priming subjects to feel happy or grateful would reduce their desire for instant gratification, thus helping them wait for a larger reward in the future.
Participants in the study could choose to receive a smaller monetary payout on the spot or wait 30 days to get a bigger payout. But before making their choice, they were each randomly assigned to write about an event from their past. Depending on how they were assigned, they wrote about something that either made them feels neutral, happy or grateful. Those who were asked to write about a neutral or happy situation preferred the immediate payout of the smaller amount — a natural human tendency called “present bias.” In short, present bias is the tendency to favour immediate rewards at the expense of long-term goals.
However, the subjects who were primed to feel grateful showed more patience and were more likely to delay gratification and wait for the larger payout. In other words, feelings of gratitude reduced financial impatience.
What’s the takeaway? An emotion such as gratitude can be leveraged in your favour.
“Showing that emotion can foster self-control and discovering a way to reduce impatience with a simple gratitude exercise opens up tremendous possibilities for reducing a wide range of societal ills from impulse buying and insufficient saving to obesity and smoking,” an assistant professor involved in the research was quoted as saying in a release announcing the study.
So if overcoming our present bias can help us make smarter long-term financial decisions, what are some ways we can exercise our gratitude muscles throughout the year?
Here are a few easy ways to get started:
Keep a gratitude journal
By writing down a few items every day that you are thankful for, you may eventually become more attuned to all the tiny good things in your life. For example, maybe it’s that first sip of coffee in the morning, the subway train that pulled up right when you needed it, or the stranger who held a door for you when your hands were full.
Volunteer
There’s nothing like helping others in need to remind us to feel grateful for what we have.
Avoid the temptation to keep up with the Joneses
Comparing our real lives to the curated “highlight reels” that others populate their social-media feeds with can leave us feeling dissatisfied instead of grateful. Sometimes a break from social media can help us focus on what’s good in our own lives. Not only that, but people tend to exaggerate their good fortune in Social Media. Don’t fall victim for that.
A simple thank you
When you make a point of acknowledging the contributions of others, you can’t help but feel grateful to have them around. You might find they reciprocate with their own thankfulness to you, which can only strengthen the feedback loop of gratitude.
Can you relate to this article? Can you share any personal experience that made you feel more grateful and help you financially as well?