Find one thing to appreciate in a current difficulty

Without toxic positivity, identify one genuine gift — skill, relationship, or insight — inside a current struggle.

Why it works

Benefit-finding research shows that people who can identify genuine positive outcomes of adverse experiences (not forced or performance-based, but actually true) report higher well-being and more resilient coping. The mechanism is meaning-making: reframing adversity as partially generative reduces the purely threat-coded response and activates approach-coping pathways. This is different from toxic positivity — it requires honesty.

How to do it

  1. Identify a current difficulty that has been ongoing for at least two weeks.
  2. Ask: "Is there anything this difficulty has given me — a skill, a relationship, a clarity — that I would not have without it?"
  3. Write only what is genuinely true. If nothing comes, write nothing — do not force it.
  4. If something genuine emerges, include it in the weekly blessing count without dismissing the difficulty alongside it.

Evidence

Benefit-finding in adversity is associated with better psychological adjustment in observational studies across cancer, bereavement, and chronic illness contexts. Forced benefit-finding does not show the same effect and may backfire. (observational)

Benefit-finding is observational; the causal direction (resilience drives benefit-finding, or benefit-finding builds resilience) is not established by this literature alone. Do not use as a directive to minimize genuine harm.

Sources

  • Helgeson, Reynolds & Tomich (2006), meta-analytic review of benefit finding and growth, Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology

Common mistake

Forcing a benefit narrative when none is genuinely present — "I’m grateful for this terrible experience" said without authenticity is toxic positivity and does harm. The practice requires genuine discovery, not performance.

Practice this with IX Coach

IX Coach asks the benefit-finding question gently and optionally when a difficulty recurs across multiple sessions, making space for the answer without requiring one.

Start with IX Coach

7 days free, then $40/month (~$1.30/day).