Mobile Search Menu
Inviting ideas and advice to help you connect, express & thrive
Article Cards Featured Image thanksgiving gratitude stories hero

The Impact of Gratitude in Our Lives

Celebrating the family moments, expressions of faith, and stories that help the spirit of Thanksgiving linger all season.

Jim McCann

Nov 30, 2025

Written by our Founder and Chairman, the Celebrations Pulse letters aim to engage with our community. By welcoming your ideas and sharing your stories, we want to help you strengthen your relationships with the most important people in your life.

Thanksgiving may be behind us, but the spirit of gratitude lingers long after the last slice of pie. Not a day goes by that I don’t think about what I’m most thankful for: my three children and the wonderful parents they’ve become.

This year’s holiday only deepened that feeling. I keep replaying the small moments that made it meaningful last week: the joy of having all seven grandkids under one roof, the familiar music of Marylou orchestrating a busy kitchen with more little helpers than ever, and the pride of watching my kids raise their kids with such patience and love.

I’ve also been thinking about the letters you’ve shared with me these past few weeks. As I wrote last week, gratitude is a powerful force. It grows as we practice it, spreading through families and communities.

As this holiday weekend ends and we look ahead to the celebrations still to come, I wanted to share a few of the stories you shared. They reflect so many different experiences and types of gratitude, and together they remind me why this community is so special.

gratitude impact holding hands photo

Gratitude for community

A number of you wrote about gratitude for the people who move through your life each day — family, friends, coworkers, and even the strangers who cross your path but still leave a mark.

One reader, Brendalee, captured the feeling when she wrote that she is grateful “for the people in my life who surround me each day, whether I know them or not.”
She makes a great point. Sometimes the simple presence of others, whether it’s the neighbor we wave to or the cashier who remembers our name, can steady us. It reminded me of how much we missed these interactions during the pandemic lockdowns a few years ago.

Others spoke of gratitude forged through years of experiencing life with other people. Kelly, a hairstylist, wrote about the blessing of hearing her clients’ stories and being there for them in big and small moments. She added:

“To be able to style and cut my clients’ hair for a living is a precious gift I don’t take for granted. To earn an honest living with each hairstyle is another blessing I appreciate.”

These are different stories and circumstances, but they both show how gratitude grows when we see each other and use our power to connect.

For me, Thanksgiving is a chance to pause and reflect, and your stories bring that spirit to life. In this short episode of Celebrate Your Story, I read some of the rituals you shared, traditions that bring families together and carry meaning across generations. I hope they’ll be as inspiring to you as they have been to me.

Faith and gratitude

Many of your letters reflected the role faith plays in shaping gratitude. For some, it’s a daily practice. For others, it’s a source of resilience during life’s hardest moments.

Ora wrote that gratitude, for her, comes “through the love of Jesus, family, and true and trustworthy friends.” Her note echoed a theme I saw often: gratitude rooted in a deeper sense of being guided and supported.

Others wrote about the strength faith provides when the future feels uncertain. Carol shared a personal story about her granddaughter, whom she raised and spoke with every day until, suddenly, the calls stopped. After months of worry and prayer, Carol finally received a text message.

“I am grateful to God that I heard from her last week and know she’s alive,” she wrote. Her gratitude wasn’t tied to an explanation or a resolution. It was the relief of knowing her granddaughter was safe.
There were other stories of answered prayer. Pam wrote with joy that her daughter is now cancer-free. After years of fear and hope, she captured the feeling in six words: “Gratitude is hearing that my daughter is cancer-free!”

Faith doesn’t erase hardship, but it often gives us the courage to keep going, and a way to recognize grace when it arrives.

Gratitude for this community

Before I close, I want to share something that’s been on my mind all month. I am grateful for you and this community. Every week, you take the time to read these letters, reflect on your own lives, and then send stories that are heartfelt, vulnerable, funny, wise, and human.

What you share isn’t small. You write about faith, family, loss, resilience, kindness, and the moments that open your heart. You remind me, again and again, that connection doesn’t depend on being in the same room. Sometimes it grows among people who gather around a story each week, who care about one another even if they’ve never met.

Your letters lift my spirits. They challenge me to think more deeply. And they reaffirm my belief that people are good, generous, and stronger than they realize. This community has become a kind of extended family that teaches me something new every week.

So thank you. Thank you for reading, for writing, and for sharing your lives. As we move through this season of celebration, I hope you continue sending your stories and reflections. They inspire me more than you know.

All the best,

Jim

Explore Popular Celebrations Pulse Topics

How Work Life Integration Is Reshaping Our Lives
Combatting Loneliness One Pen Pal at a Time
Subscribe Today
A dose of inspiration in your inbox, every Sunday!
Community Care: Turning Lives Around, One Job at a Time
Mind Over Matter: Why It's Time to Rethink Aging
How a Friendship Blossomed Into a Book: The Journey of Lodestar