September 13 is Positive Thinking Day, and a good reminder for all of us that a healthy mindset is trainable. Research suggests that incorporating small, realistic shifts in thinking can potentially improve how we feel.
Positive thinking and adopting a daily gratitude practice might sound light on the surface but both may actually have the power to reshape how we handle stress, pain, and life’s setbacks. When you build a daily gratitude practice, you strengthen a mindset that supports better sleep, steadier mood, and healthier choices.
At Alliance Chiropractic, we believe in positive lifestyle habits, and the difference they can make in our patients progress, recovery, and overall well-being.
Why Positive Thinking Day matters for your health
A positive mindset is not about ignoring real problems: it is about knowing what works, identifying options, and adopting proactive next steps. Research summaries shared by Harvard Health and PositivePsychology.com link gratitude and optimism with lower perceived stress, improved emotional well being, and healthier habits like regular exercise and better sleep. Over time, these meaningful health benefits can have a significant impact on how we feel and function.
What does having a daily gratitude practice mean?
A daily gratitude practice does not need to be perfect to be powerful.
The goal is to train your attention to notice the good, even on busy or difficult days. When practised consistently, gratitude helps your brain lean towards balanced thinking rather than worst case spirals. And that balanced outlook supports resilience – your ability to recover after experiencing setbacks or stress.
A daily gratitude practice can also make movement, exercises (for fitness or rehab), and sleep routines feel more doable because you feel more hopeful and engaged.
Tip: For parents, read our recent blog on building emotional resilience in children and why it’s important.
Quick gratitude habits you can start today
The best way to create a habit is to start small and find something you can easily repeat. Here are some examples of simple daily habits:
- Write down three things you are grateful for (in a notebook, on your phone)
- Tell a family member, co-worker, or friend something you appreciate about them
- Keep a small pad in your wallet to jot down wins or kind moments from the day
- Set an evening alarm to reflect on what you learned from a challenge
- Say thank you out loud when someone helps you, then note how it felt
Small actions like these create momentum. Over a few weeks, your daily gratitude practice becomes a steady anchor that can improve mood and support calm focus.
Can attitude impact pain?
Positive Thinking Day is a perfect time to remind all of us that a positive mindset isn’t just nice to have; it can actually affect how we react and respond to situations.
Even pain.
Pain is felt both physically and emotionally. For example, pain can prevent us from moving well or quickly. Pain can also impact how we feel – when things hurt, it can be difficult to smile and feel cheery.
Research shows that pain experiences are influenced by other factors such as stress, sleep, mood, and attitude – and that is where having a positive mindset can help.
A simple plan beyond Positive Thinking Day
Positive Thinking Day might be acknowledged once a year on September 13th annually, but gratitude should be practised daily. Here’s a simple schedule to guide you towards building and strengthening a positive mindset:
Morning
- Write three gratitudes, include one about your body or movement, because noticing what your body can do builds confidence and makes exercise feel more doable
- Take a 60 second mobility and breath reset, slow neck turns, shoulder rolls, three belly breaths, because it eases morning stiffness and steadies your nervous system
- Choose one intention for the day, patient, curious, or steady, because clear focus reduces stress and decision fatigue
Midday
- Take a five minute gratitude walk, notice three things you like in your surroundings, because pairing movement with positive attention lifts energy for the afternoon
- Thank someone by message or in person, because strong social ties buffer stress and improve mood
- Reframe one snag, name what still went right and the next small step, because that turns setbacks into problem solving rather than self criticism
Evening
- Note three good things and why they happened, because ending on a balanced review supports better sleep
- Record one health win, a short walk, stretch, or exercise set, because acknowledging effort reinforces the habits that reduce pain and improve function
- Start a 30 minute wind down, dim lights, gentle stretches, light reading, because a calmer body and mind fall asleep faster and stay asleep longer
How we can help
Adopting simple tools can help you feel and function better. Positive Thinking Day is a great reminder. A daily gratitude practice ensures the benefits are maintained throughout the year.
If you live in Ancaster or the Greater Hamilton Area, our team at Alliance Chiropractic can provide individualized plans related to your musculoskeletal care. However, your overall health and wellness depends on many factors, and we are always looking to provide patients with as much information as possible to complement the care we provide, adopt a healthy lifestyle, or simply educate them on what else could be affecting their health.
Contact us if you have questions regarding this blog or any other health or wellness concern
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Where we sourced this information
Information for this blog was sourced from Harvard Health, PositivePsychology.com, and our Blog Library.