When I first heard of this idea, a decade or
more ago, I was in a psychological place where I was learning more and more
about the idea of gratitude.
But, at the same time, I was pretty well down
the road to my secularist, contra-metaphysical philosophical naturalist stance
of today. I had tried “working with” ideas of “spirituality” but found what I
was seeing promoted under that guise was New Agey-type metaphysics that, even
if technically not religious, was indeed metaphysical and impossible to square
with my re-emerging philosophical naturalism.
But, I was still trying to wrestle with this
issue.
Having heard the phrase “an attitude of
gratitude” in both New Age-type settings and from traditional ministers, and it
being, for various reasons, an idea that I agreed with, I was trying to figure
out how to be grateful if there wasn’t anyone to whom to be grateful.
Finally, I realized that I was mentally
enshackled by the New Agey “present situations” that I had recently been in,
plus my childhood religious preacher’s kid background.
Instead, why couldn’t I simply have an
“attitude of gratitude” without a personal object for my gratitude?
And, so I do today. Little mental tools such as
reminding myself of three good things that have happened for/to me today,
especially if I had an active part in any of them, help this process.
The new job I have is reason to be grateful. I
don’t have to listen to a boss asking me to resign (and himself not being
grateful for me not doing so, since another person did leave a week after I
would have completed my 30 days notice), threaten to “forget” my paycheck, or
other things. I have work that’s fairly easy, still OK on pay, and fairly
non-stressful while leaving open a growth curve.
I have the possibility of thinking about new
work-creative outlets with the “timing” of the economy continuing to improve,
as seems likely, albeit still slowly.
I have a life free from debt, the ability to
live frugally without living stingily. That includes being a smart grocery
shopper and knowing how to cook healthily while on a budget.
I’m grateful for modern medicine, including psychological
counseling and medications as needed. Being a methodological and philosophical
naturalist, I’m grateful for the scientific mindset behind it.
I’m grateful for the Internet. I’m grateful for
the skeptical, critical thinking ability to recognize the dark side of the
Internet itself, as well as seeing through most all of the spam, urban legends
and such to which the Internet has given impetus.
Anyway, I don’t need to show you all my “gratitude
list,” though I do believe journaling like this is a helpful psychological
tool.
Let’s get back to my main point. Just as one
can be moral without god, religion or metaphysically-oriented spirituality
(karma is just as evil a “stick” as hell), one can be grateful as a state of
being without needing a good to whom to tell that.
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