Cultivating and practicing gratitude can improve your health in a range of ways. It can ease stress, anxiety, and depression. It can brighten your mood and enhance your sleep, energy, and mental focus. Gratitude also fosters a positive, optimistic frame of mind. It boosts patience and motivation. It deepens your bonds with others, helping to prevent isolation and loneliness. Gratitude can even have a positive effect on your physical health. It’s been shown to quell inflammation, ease pain, and lower blood pressure.
Yet, beyond these direct benefits to your health, gratitude does even more. Research suggests that grateful people also tend to adopt healthier habits—such as eating a nutrient-rich diet, sleeping better, quitting tobacco, and exercising regularly.
And they seem to form these habits more organically and with greater ease. This is good news, given that healthier habits help lower your risk of chronic disease and foster longevity.
To understand how a grateful mindset leads to healthier habit choices, let’s take a closer look at exactly what gratitude is and why it can be unique to each person.
Think about what gratitude means to you. You might think of it as a feeling, an attitude, an inner strength, or a value. It could be all of these things—or more. Whatever you call it, feeling grateful goes beyond saying “thank you” when someone is kind to you or helps you out. It’s more than just good manners. Gratitude is a mindset. It’s a positive and helpful way of thinking and acting—not only during good times—but also during bad times.
Feeling grateful can transform your outlook from “the glass is half empty” to “the glass is half full.” It shifts your focus to what’s good in your life and helps you dwell less on what’s bad. Gratitude can help displace negative thoughts and feelings like frustration, envy, resentment, regret, or hopelessness.
At the same time, being grateful doesn’t mean you see your life as perfect. Nor does it mean that you pretend to be happy about events in your life—past or present—that are unpleasant for you. Instead, it means appreciating what has been good in your life up to this moment. And it means casting an eye ahead toward what you believe may be good in the future.
Practicing and building gratitude is easier when you understand its 2 basic types: state gratitude and trait gratitude.
Trait gratitude offers a more stable, readily available inner resource needed to embrace healthier habits. And finding ways to practice state gratitude more often is one way to cultivate your trait gratitude. Before we outline some practical ways to increase both types of gratitude, let’s take a closer look at how it eases the formation of healthier lifestyle habits.
Kicking bad habits and adopting healthy ones often takes discipline, patience, willpower, motivation, energy, and support from others. Gratitude is a powerful tool for tapping into these inner resources by helping to:
Gratitude is not a trait you’re born with. It’s a skill and a mindset that must be learned and developed—with time and practice. It’s not hard. All it takes are subtle shifts in your thinking and actions as you go about each day. Try these nuts-and-bolts steps for nurturing your grateful side:
Developing your gratitude is a win-win for your health and for the habits that will help improve, support, and protect it. Gratitude benefits your health directly, but it also facilitates the adoption of good-for-you lifestyle choices that may last a lifetime. This helps create a positive feedback loop in which gratitude fosters healthier habits, which can in turn foster even more gratitude, and so on.
So, take the steps described in this article to nurture your gratitude and see if you start to notice positive changes in your lifestyle habits. Doing so may enhance your health and well-being for years to come.
The information in this and other Active&Fit® blog articles is not intended to take the place of regular medical care or advice. Please check with your doctor before using this information or beginning any fitness or self-care program. Images used for this article do not depict any members of the Active&Fit Direct program.
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This article was written by Gail Olson, edited by Jason Nielsen, and clinically reviewed by Elizabeth Thompson, MPH, RDN, on October 30, 2025.