Gratitude Lists Keep You Stuck. Gratitude Walks Set You Free.
Why embodied practice works when cognitive exercises fail
Gratitude journals are the productivity culture’s latest way to colonize your spiritual practice.
Write three things you’re grateful for. Count your blessings. List what went well today. It’s self-improvement disguised as spirituality, just another task to perform correctly, another metric to track, another way to judge yourself for not being grateful enough.
As an ordained Wild Guide who’s walked with dozens of seekers, I’ve watched gratitude lists fail repeatedly. Not because gratitude doesn’t matter, but because cognitive exercises about gratitude bypass the body.
They keep thanksgiving locked in your head, where it easily becomes performance.
Medieval pilgrims understood something we’ve forgotten, gratitude lives in movement, not in mental lists.
They practiced thanksgiving with their feet. Every step was an expression of being alive. Every breath was an acknowledgment of the air that fed them. Their bodies spoke what their minds couldn’t manufacture.
Ecophilosopher Joanna Macy teaches that gratitude is an invitation, not a requirement. You cannot force authentic thanksgiving any more than you can command a seed to grow.
This week, skip the journal. Walk fifteen minutes without headphones. Notice your feet touching ground, your breath moving, the world holding you. Don’t try to think grateful thoughts. Let your body express what your mind struggles to articulate.
When words fail, steps speak. That’s embodied thanksgiving.
Walk with Me
If this resonates, I invite you to subscribe to Where Insight Meets Earth—weekly reflections on contemplative walking, ecospirituality, and deepening kinship with the more-than-human world.
I’m launching the Rewilding the Soul EcoSpirituality Certificate at Cherry Hill Seminary in March 2025—a year-long journey exploring Earth kinship through contemplative practice, ritual, and embodied spirituality. Learn more here.
In September 2026, I’m leading a contemplative walking retreat on France’s ancient Le Puy Camino route—eight days practicing embodied gratitude on paths pilgrims have walked for over a thousand years. Four spots available. Details here.
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Walking beside you,
Jeffrey


Love this! I have historically felt guilty about my gratitude journals. And walking always sets my mood in a more open, grateful direction. This is such a sweet simple offering of how to add awareness to my daily walks <3
I also don't believe in gratitude journals Jeffrey, but believe in focusing on a particular thought for a moment in the day in my head. No paper required!