19 Sep New Poll Reveals The Secret to Happiness is Practicing Gratitude
This is NOT necessarily a new or surprising finding.
For thousands upon thousands of years, almost every major religion and many great philosophical thinkers have, in one way or other, advocated for the practice of gratitude and appreciation.
Giving thanks, is indubitably, a significant contributor to happiness and wellbeing, to living a good life.
But it is good to be reminded that there’s strong scientific evidence to support the efficacy of gratitude and so for some happiness and positive news, read on …
via the Good News Network
The secret to maximum happiness may be expressing gratitude, a new poll suggests.
The random double-opt-in survey of 2,000 Americans looked at the potential connection between gratitude and happiness — revealing that 65% of respondents who report that they’re “very happy” on a daily basis were more likely to “always” give thanks.
While looking at the correlation between life satisfaction and gratitude, one-third of respondents said they “always” express gratitude in their everyday lives. Of those, 62% noted they were “very satisfied” with their lives.
Conducted by OnePoll on behalf of Motivosity, the survey also found that, on average, respondents believe they express gratitude to others about six times a month – and they receive the same amount of appreciation back.
Regionally, residents in the southwest (75%), northeast (74%) and midwest (73%) were more likely to express gratitude than others surveyed in the county—followed by the southeast (68%) and west coast residents (63%).
“There’s a dramatic correlation between gratitude and happiness,” said Logan Mallory, vice president of marketing at Motivosity. “When people are proactive about being grateful, it rewires their brain to look for positives instead of the negatives around them.
“Previous studies and these survey results tell us that if you want to experience an increase in life satisfaction, just express gratitude more often!”
Respondents say they receive the most gratitude from their spouses or partners (28%), family members (26%), and friends (24%) – with bosses (17%) and co-workers (15%) trailing further down the list…
… keep reading the full & original article HERE