It’s late summer, but you wouldn’t know it walking into Target. The aisles are already lined with candy corn and skeletons. Starbucks recently launched its Pumpkin Spice Latte, weeks before the leaves even start to turn. And before long, Thanksgiving will be here too, the season when everyone feels pressure to have a Thanksgiving gratitude practice. But instead of raising your frequency, it often turns into just another task on the to-do list.
Some people roll their eyes at how early all of this shows up. Others line up for that first PSL excited to welcome a new season.
Either way, it’s a reminder: seasons shift whether we’re ready or not.
And for many women I work with, that’s what life feels like right now. You’ve built the successful life you thought you wanted. Career, family, stability. But something inside is shifting. You don’t always have words for it, but you feel it.
That’s where gratitude comes in. Not the checklist kind. The embodied, felt-sense kind.
Gratitude Shows You’re Open To Receiving
When we play with gratitude, it’s important to not just list it out, but to really feel it. Gratitude is not something to cross off your never ending to do list. It’s an emotional state that opens your ability to receive.
The key is the because.
- “I’m grateful for my morning walk because it reminds me my body can carry me forward, even when my mind wants to stay stuck.”
- “I’m grateful for my friendships because they reflect back the parts of me I sometimes forget to honor.”
Without the because, gratitude stays in your head. It becomes another task, another list. With the because, gratitude drops you into your body. You feel it—radiant, peaceful, expansive—from the tip of your head to the bottom of your toes.
That’s when gratitude shifts into frequency. It vibrates through you. It signals to your nervous system that you are safe. And when your system feels safe, your mind quiets, and you open to possibility.
The Emotional Frequency of Receivership
Dr. Joe Dispenza calls gratitude the emotional signature of receivership. When you embody gratitude, you’re not just noticing what you already have, you’re preparing yourself to receive more.
You’re grateful for what was. You’re grateful for what is. You’re grateful for what will be. And by feeling it now, you signal that it’s already here.
Why Gratitude Works
Psychologists confirm what spiritual teachers have said for centuries: gratitude heals. Not as a mental exercise, but as an embodied state.
Research shows that daily gratitude practices can significantly increase long-term well-being. Gratitude also improves sleep, lowers blood pressure, boosts resilience, strengthens relationships, and quiets fear.
And here’s something important for women in transition: it’s almost impossible to feel fear and gratitude at the same time. Fear keeps you in lack. Gratitude opens you to abundance.
So when you feel the hum of worry about your kids, your future, or your next move, try shifting into gratitude with a because. It doesn’t erase the challenge, but it changes your state of being.
The Seasonal Reminder
Walking outside in late August, the air is still heavy with summer. But if you pay attention, there’s a shift. The mornings feel a little different. The light falls at a slightly new angle. It’s a reminder that fall, and Thanksgiving, are on their way.
That shift is subtle, but it’s there. And it’s a reminder that endings and beginnings are always paired.
Gratitude works the same way. You don’t have to wait for the big moment; the promotion, the divorce settlement, the new chapter. You can feel gratitude now, not by listing what you “should” appreciate, but by connecting to it.
- I’m grateful for this late summer air because it reminds me that change is natural.
- I’m grateful for this PSL because it reminds me that I can savor life’s small pleasures even when big questions remain.
- I’m grateful for these store aisles full of Halloween candy because they make me laugh at how quickly we want to move ahead, and it reminds me to stay right here grounded in the present moment.
A Guided Moment of Gratitude: Feel the Benefits of This Practice
Try it now.
Place your hand on your heart. Close your eyes if it’s comfortable for you to do so. Take one slow breath in, hold, and slowly release. Do that again.
Now think of one thing you’re grateful for. Then add “I’m grateful for ____ because” and finish the sentence.
Notice what shifts in your body.
This is the practice. Not a list. A frequency.
Why a Gratitude Practice Matters in This Season
Thanksgiving will be here before we know it. The holiday tends to magnify the “shoulds.” You should be happy. You should be grateful. You should be fine.
But gratitude doesn’t come from “shoulds.” It comes from presence. From feeling the frequency in your body, not just thinking it in your head.
Whether you’re sipping the season’s first Pumpkin Spice Latte, noticing Halloween candy in the stores, or thinking ahead to how you’ll navigate Thanksgiving, use gratitude as your anchor. When you connect to the because, your nervous system shifts, and with it, so does your sense of calm.
Remember, gratitude isn’t something to check off a list. It’s a way of being.
Gratitude isn’t reserved for Thanksgiving. It’s a frequency you can choose every day. One that calms your nervous system, steadies your heart, and opens you to receive more than you thought possible.
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