brainbaking/content/post/can-i-haz-happy-thoughts.md

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Ending your day with happy thoughts 2013-08-13 /img/Ending your day with happy thoughts.jpg Or how a tiny thing can really help you sleep better
self improvement
Past new year, I stopped promising silly things to myself. “This year, Ill for sure go jogging several times a week!”or “This year, Ill really get into learning another language!”. We all know how these things go. Not that I made something up on the very day, these ideas are usually carefully crafted in my sketchbook and are lingering there to be exposed and finally executed.

Originally posted on Medium.

Past new year, I stopped promising silly things to myself. “This year, Ill for sure go jogging several times a week!”or “This year, Ill really get into learning another language!”. We all know how these things go. Not that I made something up on the very day, these ideas are usually carefully crafted in my sketchbook and are lingering there to be exposed and finally executed.

But there was someting I came across to on the internet I really, really liked. Something small and seemingly insignificant. These 365 things are not exactly new, I know. And “keeping notes to sort out your thoughts” is something I already do for years using my sketchbook which I carry with me everywhere.

I found another tiny sketchbook I did not use, grabbed a pencil and put these two objects beside my bed. I labelled the book “365", sewed a little hedgehog friend to give the booklet a fluffy look and started writing before actually going to sleep. You should write one sentence, every day. In this sentence, you should be thankful of someone or somethingthat happened to you today.

Sounds easy? Right. Put it to practice. It sometimes is extremely easy. It sometimes is extremely hard. Really, really hard.

Frustrated? Write. You should. And by “write”, I dont mean whole pages. Just one sentence: what happened to you today, what did you like? Focus on the good stuff.

I have to admit, sometimes more than other times, I have trouble finding good the good stuff. Some days, my work can be really frustrating, the lawn mower got jammed halfway through the lawn, the bycicle chain broke, … I think you recognize these days.

When I go to sleep, I mull over things that happened that dayits not some deliberate action, and sometimes I cant seem to get rid of certain thoughts. Like how to convince your colleage to use method x and not method y to do work z. No worriesgrab that pencil and write in your 365 booklet. Start with 2 simple words: “thank you”. These can end in “thank you dear x for retweeting about a meetup I will attend” or “thank you mother for dropping by and cooking hot soup”. (Yes they sound very cliché, make up your own!)

In my experience, mindfully going through your day and thinking about what you liked most gives me happy thoughts and a sort of satisfaction feeling. It helps me sleep. Its interesting to reread previous months.

So, thank you internet for all those amazing blogs and great ideas, even if its as simple as writing down what you liked that day.

Oh, and heres a pro-tip: use a pencil.That way, you can write while lying down in your bed.