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Episode Summary:
In episode 160 of Jim’s Take, Jim dismantles the idea of gratitude as a seasonal, soft, feel-good emotion and rebuilds it as a year-round cognitive discipline. Instead of treating gratitude like a holiday prop, he explores how to turn it into a sustainable, repeatable practice that still works in February when it’s cold, gray, and noisy.
Drawing from research (including the work of Richard Boyatzis on the parasympathetic nervous system) and his own cranky mood while recording, Jim reframes gratitude as an interpretation: your brain notices, assigns value, and then you feel it. That insight opens the door to training gratitude instead of waiting for it.
In this episode, we cover:
Key Takeaways:
Gratitude is not effortless; it’s a recognition skill that interrupts your default wiring.
You can train gratitude by changing perspective, practicing presence, and capturing proof.
Real gratitude doesn’t need a post – it needs your attention.
Gratitude is not about settling. You can want more and respect the work that got you here.
When you deliberately practice gratitude, you become harder to knock off your game.
By Jim Frawley, Bellwether4.6
1212 ratings
Episode Summary:
In episode 160 of Jim’s Take, Jim dismantles the idea of gratitude as a seasonal, soft, feel-good emotion and rebuilds it as a year-round cognitive discipline. Instead of treating gratitude like a holiday prop, he explores how to turn it into a sustainable, repeatable practice that still works in February when it’s cold, gray, and noisy.
Drawing from research (including the work of Richard Boyatzis on the parasympathetic nervous system) and his own cranky mood while recording, Jim reframes gratitude as an interpretation: your brain notices, assigns value, and then you feel it. That insight opens the door to training gratitude instead of waiting for it.
In this episode, we cover:
Key Takeaways:
Gratitude is not effortless; it’s a recognition skill that interrupts your default wiring.
You can train gratitude by changing perspective, practicing presence, and capturing proof.
Real gratitude doesn’t need a post – it needs your attention.
Gratitude is not about settling. You can want more and respect the work that got you here.
When you deliberately practice gratitude, you become harder to knock off your game.