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The word appreciation has two meanings: to be thankful and to increase in value over time. Now, it turns out, the more you appreciate life, the more your happiness and productivity
appreciates over time. Scientific research from notable psychologists shows that grateful people are more likely to be happy and successful. THE GRATITUDE EFFECT A highly cited study by UCLA
and the University of Miami found that people who wrote down what they were grateful for on a weekly basis were more cheerful and optimistic about the upcoming week than those who
didn't. They also had fewer doctors visits and missed fewer days of work. A separate study published in The Journal of Psychology supports these conclusions. Keeping a daily journal of
moments or events of things you're grateful for is linked to increased happiness, researchers conclude. And happiness plays an important role in our careers. Positive people are more
likely to perform better on assigned tasks and are more likely to get favorable evaluations by supervisors, research shows. Billionaire and media mogul Oprah Winfrey has long been an
advocate of keeping a journal for tracking gratitude. "You radiate and generate more goodness for yourself when you're aware of all you have and not focusing on your
have-nots," Winfrey writes on her website. "Shark Tank" judge and multi-millionaire Daymond John is another successful businessperson who publicly discusses the importance of
gratitude. Embedded Tweet Not only does gratitude help boost general well being, it also specifically improves self-esteem. A 2014 study published in the _Journal of Applied Sport
Psychology_ found that athletes who were more grateful had higher self-esteem, which also has been linked to higher job performance. In fact, for "Shark Tank" investor and
entrepreneur Robert Herjavec, appreciating where you are in life is key to career success. One of the ways you know you're on the right career path, Herjavec writes, is that "You
feel good — about yourself, about your life, about all you have achieved and all the things you plan to achieve." _Disclosure: CNBC owns the exclusive off-network cable rights to
"Shark Tank."_