Reader's Digest

MY Thank you YEAR

How writing 365 notes of appreciati­on reconnecte­d me to what’s important in my life

- By Gina Hamadey

In

January 2018, I was commuting from Brooklyn to New Jersey. I have two little kids and a busy consulting business, so a quiet train ride felt like a mini vacation. Yet I found myself spending that precious time slack-jawed, scrolling through my social media feeds. One day, I put down my phone and started writing thank-you notes to people who had contribute­d to a fundraiser I had organized.

When I got off the train that day, I was in a noticeably better mood. The next day, I wrote more thank-yous— and felt the same afterglow. When I finished writing the notes, I counted them up. There were 31—one for every day of the year so far. Something clicked. What if I kept it up?

I decided to write one thank-you note for every day of that year. I had no shortage of people I was grateful for. So I picked out a different theme for each month to keep on task. January was charity—and, thankfully, I had already completed that goal.

February would be dedicated to neighbors, I decided, and I thought of a dozen names right away. I remembered when the owners of our local bookstore let me and my fiveyear-old son, Henry, in before the store opened and offered to play his favorite soundtrack (Mary Poppins). I recalled when our 14-yearold babysitter dropped off a bag of old board games for our kids to play.

Writing the notes wasn’t all that time-consuming: Each was two or three sentences long, taking just a few minutes to compose. I focused on the person I was writing to and what I wanted to say, and the words came fairly easily. I quickly learned I couldn’t do it while listening to a podcast or toggling between articles. That focus felt refreshing. It was good for my brain, which had been trained to wander, alighting on this feed or that e-mail, darting from app to app. It felt meditative to look at a blank white space with a pen in my hand, thinking about a person and the way he or she had helped me.

While writing the notes, I eventually realized why this task was the perfect antidote to my social feeds. What was I actually doing when I scrolled through Facebook? Too often, I was spiraling into rage. Writing thank-you notes was time spent on something purely positive. What was I doing when I scrolled through Instagram? More often than not, I was admiring other people’s lives—their beach vacations, their chubby babies, their

organized kitchens. Writing thank-you notes was an act of noticing and honoring my own life.

After handing the first batch of notes to my neighbors, I spent a few days trying to remember times when other neighbors did something nice for me. And funny enough, I started noticing kindnesses that were happening in real time.

There was the driver who waited for me as I bolted down the street to catch his shuttle bus. There was the cashier at Trader Joe’s who chased me with a bag of groceries I’d left behind.

On the day I delivered that card to Trader Joe’s, my mother-in-law, Louise, dropped off a week’s worth of dinners. OK, I thought, Louise is not technicall­y a neighbor. But if I was going to thank grocer Pete for three minutes of his time, I needed to acknowledg­e Louise for hours of hers. It was important for these months to be flexible, I decided. I would use each month’s theme as a starting point, but I’d also watch for anyone going above and beyond, regardless of whether he or she fit into the monthly theme.

So in the ensuing months, as I wrote to friends, doctors, career mentors, and parenting role models, I also dashed off missives to my husband,

Jake, as well as my siblings, in-laws, and parents. And I found that doing so changed the fundamenta­l dynamics of these relationsh­ips in small but impactful ways. I was smoothing out any prickly bumps and buffing them to a new shine. It is a powerful thing, I learned, to fully appreciate and feel fully appreciate­d by the people closest to you.

By the time I got to July, my “food” month, I had become fairly adept at retrieving memories and identifyin­g people to thank. Among that month’s recipients was a chef, Julie, who had cooked at my favorite but now defunct restaurant. Here’s what I wrote to her:

Dear Julie,

I’ve been finding myself missing Little Giant lately, as if it were a person. Thank you for creating such a warm and special place, and for hosting me and cooking beautiful and thoughtful food.

The Little Giant menu has informed my cooking—i am always trying to re-create some of that magic. Jake and I will never forget when you sent out biscuits shaped into the Roman numeral VI for our sixth anniversar­y. We talk about it every year.

Thank you. We miss Little Giant and you.

Love,

Gina

I COMPLETED MY GOAL WITH HOURS TO SPARE, WRITING TO JAKE ON DECEMBER 31.

I was delighted to receive a note back from her. Julie replied, “I don’t think I’ve ever received such a touching letter before. Out of the blue and incredibly thoughtful. And so needed at a time when I’m struggling profession­ally. Your letter was a fabulous reminder that looking back is a good motivator for moving forward.”

It was one of many responses throughout the year that said something along the lines of, “I’m going through a tough time right now, and this helped.” It turns out a lot of people are going through something a lot of the time. And I wouldn’t have known if I hadn’t reached out.

Part of the magic of what I am calling my Thank-you Year was reconnecti­ng with people like Julie—people on the periphery of my life who neverthele­ss made a lasting impact. And here’s another huge bonus: I was reminded to acknowledg­e people in the moment, too—to smile or say hello, or thanks, or “Here, let me help you with that.”

I admit, I fell behind more than once during the year. But I completed my goal with hours to spare—writing my last card (to Jake) on December 31. That night, we hosted a big New Year’s Eve dinner, and I looked around at my guests. There was Alonso from Berlin, whom I’d written to in my “travel” month. There were Nick and Ro, in from Minneapoli­s, who’d received cards in my “friends” and “career mentors” months. There was Mollie, who racked up notes as a mentor, friend, and neighbor. There was Jake, of course. Henry had fallen asleep on the couch; his brother, Charlie, was upstairs in bed. I snapped a picture of the scene so I could remember the feeling welling up inside me. Gratitude.

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I wrote each note by hand, with a pen, never on a computer, and mailed or handdelive­red them all.
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