The One Thing Stress Can’t Share Space With
- Ryan M. Sheade, LCSW

- Jan 15
- 2 min read
A colleague said something to me recently that stopped me cold: “Gratitude and stress can’t coexist.”
At first, I wanted to argue with it. Because stress shows up everywhere. In good lives. In meaningful work. In loving families. And gratitude can feel like a luxury when your nervous system is fried and your mind is running laps at 3 a.m.
But the more I sat with it, the more it landed. Not as a platitude. As a practice.
Stress thrives on contraction. On narrowing. On the belief that something is wrong and you’re alone in fixing it. Gratitude does the opposite. It widens the lens. It brings the body back into the room. It reminds you that even in the middle of pressure, there is still support, still breath, still something solid under your feet.
This doesn’t mean gratitude erases stress. It interrupts it.
When gratitude is real, not performative or forced, the nervous system shifts. The shoulders drop. The breath deepens. The body gets the message that it is not under attack in this exact moment. And that message matters.
Most people think gratitude is about positivity. It’s not. It’s about orientation. Stress says, “I am overwhelmed and behind. ”Gratitude says, “I am here, and I am resourced.”
You can’t fully inhabit both at the same time.
In my work, I see people try to think their way out of stress. They analyze it. Manage it. Optimize it. But stress is not impressed by insight alone. It lives in the body. Which means the antidote has to land there too.
Gratitude, when practiced honestly, is somatic. It’s felt. It’s grounded. It’s noticing the chair holding you up. The person who didn’t leave. The small win you dismissed too quickly. The fact that your body, despite everything, is still trying to take care of you.
This is not about bypassing pain. It’s about giving your system moments of safety inside the storm. And those moments add up.
You don’t need to feel grateful for everything. You don’t need to minimize your stress. You just need to notice one true thing that steadies you. One anchor. One breath. One reminder that stress does not get to be the only voice in the room.
That’s where the shift begins.
If your organization, community, or team is burning out under constant pressure, this conversation matters. I speak about stress, resilience, and grounded practices that actually change how people show up. Not hype. Not slogans. Real tools for real humans. Reach out through my speaking site if you’re ready to bring something meaningful into the room.





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