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Thankfulness is the least valued or revered of all human emotions.
And don’t take my word for it, listen to the economist Richard Layard whose book Happiness subjects our lives to a statistical analysis that draws lessons on the basis of economic outcomes. After exhaustive research, Layard, who founded Europe’s leading economics research center at the London School of Economics, comes to this conclusion:
‘People are happier if they are compassionate; they are happier if they are thankful for what they have. When life gets rough, these qualities become ever more important.’
Despite Layard’s evidence, that all of us do better with gratitude in our hearts, thankfulness is something that we struggle to articulate. And we’re not alone.
Shakespeare can divine every human emotion imaginable, from jealousy (Othello) to psychosis (King Lear), but thankfulness is a less prominent commodity in his canon of works.
But if you don’t regard Shakespeare as an authority then what about the library of business literature? Perhaps surprisingly, in light of Layard’s research, most of the books on the psychology of business focus on goals, ambitions and personal planning. But gratitude? Not so much.
For myself, the experience of thankfulness came neither from literature nor economics but from being born in a family where one of the children was severely disabled. My brother Tommy was born with Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy. He was born a year before myself, but although he was a year older, it soon became apparent that he was not a year stronger.
I can remember the experience, at around the age of 8, being able to beat him across short distances on the housing project in south London where we were lived. When we fought over toys, like Matchbox cars, he could never win the fight. It remains a deep and abiding pain, and shame, that I did not realize what was happening until I reached the age of about 12. His body was poisoned with a disease that would ultimately kill him.
But from the moment I realized how fortunate I was, thankfulness drove almost every one of my endeavors. How could it not? As I became stronger, through adolescence, Tommy became weaker. He went from walking alone to being wheelchair-bound and incapable of feeding himself. And every day, I realized how fortunate I was to have a fully functioning body and limbs that were strengthening not atrophying.









