Gratitude 2026

This week I am thinking about gratitude. That’s not hard for me. I was born an optimist; I always see the glass half-full. I always make lemonade from lemons — what else would you do with them? While it is certainly true that I have had my share of bad days, I’ll be the first to tell you that they have made me a better person. And they made me a better doctor, too. See what I mean? Glass half full. It’s a given. 

I had a personal laugh once when a friend send me a “positivity challenge.” As far as I’m concerned, it’s never been positivity that was the challenge. Nevertheless, there is so much for which I am grateful. Here is my very abbreviated list:

I am grateful for four little beings whose very existence feeds my soul in ways I find difficult to describe. I could not have predicted this. It amazes me that you have to live most of your life, or at least a good portion of it, before you are privileged to meet some of the most important people in your life. I am speaking, of course, about grandchildren. 

I am grateful for my family and our regular get-togethers. 

I am grateful for my friends, especially some of my oldest friends, whom I have known for many decades now. 

I had breakfast at a new place with a friend who has a gift for words, and she asked me all kinds of questions about a writing project I’ve been working on. Her questions are the very best. They help me to clarify, understand, and see things in my project that were invisible to me, and I certainly did not know to ask about them. 

I am deeply grateful to a family whose commitment to nutritious food and lovingkindness once allowed my child the rare pleasure of enjoying a bowl of sweet potato ice cream made with coconut and sunflower seed milks! 

I began a daily yoga and meditation practice in January 2016. This month I am proud to say that I have been practicing for ten years. I would never, ever have imagined the direction those first few days would take me. Days became weeks, weeks became months, months became years. And then a decade. 3650+ days. It would all have been much too much to try had I known where it would lead. But one day at a time it has taken me here nevertheless. I continue to practice. There is so much to learn. 

In 2026, I am looking forward to a number of speaking opportunities on health, wellness, mindfulness, nutritious food. I continue to believe that mindfulness is the most important pillar of wellness. 

I am most grateful for the fact that, for the first time in a great many years, I am not sleep deprived. I am done with multi-tasking, and so grateful for the realization.

8 thoughts on “Gratitude 2026


  1. Dear Dr Sukol,
    And we – your devoted readers- are so grateful to have your posts every Sunday!

    With heartfelt thanks,
    Elsa Soriano,
    Buenos Aires

    P.S.: so looking forward to your book🙏


  2. …And I am so grateful to you for the gifted physician you are, who helped Phil and me so much. Also, your blog brings a smile to my face every time I read your words and wisdom. Happy new year, Roxanne!


  3. The professionals at Astroideal agree that gratitude, like the one you describe here, isn’t just a feeling — it’s a practice that reshapes how we perceive our daily reality. Reading about your decade of yoga and meditation alongside the family relationships you cherish reminded us how often the deepest forms of well-being come from the quietest routines. In our experience supporting people on their personal growth journeys, those who cultivate gratitude consistently report feeling more resilient when life gets noisy. It’s a powerful reminder that health isn’t only on your plate, but also in the pauses we give ourselves to notice what’s already good. Thank you for this heartfelt reflection. — astroideal


Leave a Reply to Elsa Soriano Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.