Gratitude Unlocked 4/7: Stop Second-Guessing. Your Past Has Receipts. #TrustYourselfThursday
13 November 2025

Gratitude Unlocked 4/7: Stop Second-Guessing. Your Past Has Receipts. #TrustYourselfThursday

Dr. Derek Suite - The Suite Spot

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SCIENCE • SOUL • SUCCESS

"Give thanks in all circumstances; for this is God's will for you in Christ Jesus." — 1 Thessalonians 5:18

Fear makes your world small. Gratitude makes it wide enough to move in.

And neuroscience proves this.

When you're scared, your brain narrows. Your vision tunnels. You miss options that are right in front of you. But when you practice gratitude? Your perspective expands. You see evidence. You remember what worked before. And suddenly, your next step doesn't feel like a leap into the void — it feels like the obvious move.

So let's talk about trust. Real trust. Not the motivational-poster kind.

I'm talking about the kind that comes from looking back and realizing: I've been carried before. I'll be carried again.

And here's what's fascinating:

Every wisdom tradition on the planet figured this out thousands of years before we had fMRIs. Hebrew psalms. Stoic morning practices. Buddhist teachings on non-grasping. Indigenous sunrise gratitude. They all follow the same pattern:

Remember your help. Draw strength from it. Express thanks. Then move with peace.

That's not religion. That's mental architecture.

When Paul wrote "give thanks in all circumstances," he wasn't asking people to ignore their pain or fake happiness. He was teaching them how to train their attention to find the steady ground that's already under their feet — even when everything around them is shaking.

Let me show you what this looks like in your world:

    You're an athlete grinding through the work nobody sees — gratitude for the grind builds trust in your preparation. Every rep becomes proof that you're ready.You're a leader facing a call you've never had to make — look back at the decisions that shaped your path. You've navigated hard before. That's evidence, not luck.You're a caregiver running on fumes — the fact that you keep showing up, night after night, even when the tank reads empty? That's not weakness. That's proof you're built for this.

And here's what's happening in your body when you do this:

Naming what's steady engages your prefrontal cortex. The panic button in your amygdala cools down. Your vagal tone improves. Your nervous system gets the signal: We're safe. We can think clearly now.

You're not running from fear. You're rewiring how you respond to it.

So here's your practice:

Before your next decision, performance, or tough conversation — take one breath.

Inhale and recall one moment of unexpected help. One time something worked out when you weren't sure it would.

Exhale and say "thank you."

That's it. One breath. One memory. One acknowledgment.

You're activating evidence. You're reminding your brain: I've done hard things before. I have help. I can trust my next move.

And those detours? Those closed doors that frustrated you last year? Look closer. How many of them carried you exactly where you needed to be?

That's not just coincidence but a pattern.  A pattern that builds trust.

So what proof from your past can you thank right now? What moment of unexpected help is sitting in your memory, waiting to steady you today?

If this gave you even a little peace, send it to someone who's doubting themselves this week.

Subscribe. Leave a quick review. Help someone else find the calm they need.

Because the proof you're looking for? You're already standing on it.

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