The Psychology of ‘Thank You’

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€8,49

Most of us were taught that gratitude is good manners. In reality, it reveals what we believe about dependence, worthiness, and love. When "thank you" sticks in your throat—or spills out automatically—you are exposing old stories about pride, shame, obligation, and safety.

Drawing on psychology, neuroscience, and real-life reflections, this book shows how gratitude can:

  • Calm an anxious, threat-focused mind
  • Heal the inner critic and soften shame
  • Expose unfair emotional labor and clarify boundaries
  • Loosen family patterns of guilt, people-pleasing, and performance
  • Turn everyday moments into chances for repair, not perfection
  • You will learn practical reflections and small experiments—not forced positivity or fake cheerfulness—that help you receive help without self-attack, give without burning out, and thank yourself for the courage you've already shown.

    Whether you are exhausted from always giving, uneasy about needing others, or simply curious about the deeper layers of appreciation, The Psychology of "Thank You" invites you to build an honest, resilient ethic of gratitude—one where "thank you" becomes less a habit of politeness and more a quiet signature of who you are becoming.

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