What Makes Three Observations Different
Most people try gratitude journaling and give up within a week. They write “I’m grateful for my family, my health, my job” and it feels hollow. The words don’t stick. Your brain doesn’t believe them because they’re too vague, too familiar. That’s where the three observations approach changes everything.
Instead of listing things you’re generally grateful for, you’re capturing three specific moments from your actual day. Something that happened. Something you noticed. Something that made a difference. It’s concrete. It’s real. And it’s why this ritual works where generic gratitude falls flat.
Observation One: Something That Went Well
This isn’t about the biggest success of your day. It’s about anything that went better than expected. Maybe a conversation didn’t turn awkward. Maybe you finished a task without interruptions. Maybe someone responded quickly to a message you’d been worrying about.
Write it down exactly as it happened. Not “I had a good day” — that’s too broad. But “The client meeting ended 10 minutes early and they seemed genuinely interested in the next phase” — that’s specific enough your brain remembers it. You’re training your mind to notice the wins, even the small ones. Most evenings, at least one thing goes right. We just don’t stop to acknowledge it.
The key: Write what actually happened, not your interpretation of it. “The presentation went well” “Three people asked follow-up questions I hadn’t prepared for, and I answered without panicking.”
Important Note
This article provides educational information about gratitude practices and mindset development. It’s not a substitute for professional mental health support. If you’re struggling with anxiety, depression, or other mental health challenges, please consult with a qualified healthcare provider or therapist. The gratitude ritual described here is meant to complement, not replace, professional care.
Observation Two: Something You Noticed
This one’s different. It’s not about something that happened to you. It’s something you saw or experienced that caught your attention. The light hitting the leaves at a certain angle. A colleague’s genuine laugh in a meeting. A song playing in a café that you hadn’t heard in years. Your kid solving a problem without asking for help.
You’re shifting your focus from productivity and outcomes to the world around you. Most days we’re on autopilot, heads down, moving through tasks. This observation forces you to actually look. To notice the small details. And when you write it down, you’re cementing the memory. Your brain gets better at spotting these moments the next day.
Why this matters: You’ll start noticing more of these moments naturally. Within two weeks, you’ll catch yourself thinking “Oh, I should write that down” multiple times throughout the day. Your brain is literally rewiring itself to notice positive things.
Observation Three: Something That Mattered
The third observation is the one that made a difference. Not to your to-do list. To you. Maybe someone listened when you needed to be heard. Maybe you helped someone figure something out. Maybe you showed up for something even though you didn’t feel like it. Maybe you learned something that changed how you see a problem.
This is the anchor observation. It connects you to purpose. It reminds you that your day wasn’t just about checking boxes — it was about connection, growth, or contribution. Even on brutal days, there’s usually one moment like this if you look for it.
21
Days to notice a pattern
3
Minutes per evening
100%
Of days have one
How to Start Tonight
You don’t need anything special. Just a notebook, your phone’s notes app, or even a voice memo. The ritual takes 3-5 minutes. Here’s the exact process.
Find a quiet moment
Ideally before bed, but anytime works. You’re looking for 5 minutes without distractions.
Write the three observations
Something that went well. Something you noticed. Something that mattered. One sentence each is fine. Two if you need more detail.
Don’t overthink it
Your first instinct is usually right. If you’re second-guessing whether something “counts” as an observation, it does.
Keep going
Day 1 feels awkward. Day 7 feels normal. Day 21 feels essential. Stick with it through the awkward phase.
The Power of Specificity
The three observations ritual works because it’s specific. It’s not “be grateful.” It’s “write down what actually happened.” Your brain responds to concrete details. It doesn’t respond to vague intentions. That’s why so many people fail at gratitude journaling — they’re trying to feel grateful without giving their brain anything real to grab onto.
But when you write three specific observations, you’re giving your brain exactly what it needs. You’re showing it: “This is what I’m paying attention to. This is what matters. This is what a good day looks like.” After three weeks of this, your brain starts automatically noticing these things. You’ll catch yourself thinking “I should write that down” during your day. That’s when you know it’s working.
Start tonight. Don’t wait for the perfect journal or the right time. Grab whatever’s nearby and write three observations about today. You’ll be surprised how easily they come.