Arguments from life and literature on the topic “What is gratitude”


Every day we thank someone, someone thanks us, so the question “What is gratitude?” makes you think and turn to various sources, collect arguments from life and literature, study them to answer this question, and also find out whether a person needs this feeling or can do without it. In the process of work, we discovered that this problem is relevant, it was and is of interest to many famous people: writers, poets, philosophers, critics, politicians. It is often found in works of Russian and foreign fiction, in folk wisdom and life. Many great minds have spoken about gratitude.

Arguments

  1. Gratitude is one of the most pleasant feelings.
  2. It's nice to receive gratitude. This gives you a feeling of self-worth and value.
  3. The feeling of gratitude can be born instantly and remain with a person for many years.
  4. Sometimes people forget about gratitude.
  5. If gratitude disappears, then humanity will be lost.
  6. A person needs to learn to be grateful for everything that fate has given him.
  7. It is good to give goodness to someone who knows how to respond to this goodness with sincere gratitude.
  8. Gratitude serves as a measure of morality.
  9. You can express gratitude through words, actions, and a kind attitude.
  10. What is more important is gratitude expressed not in words, but in actions.
  11. At the moment when a person gives thanks, he cannot be angry or experience negative emotions, since gratitude is a pleasant, positive feeling.

Arguments from literature

  1. A.S. Pushkin "The Captain's Daughter". Story by A.S. Pushkin’s “The Captain’s Daughter” is a work that has not lost its value and instructiveness for many decades. Together with the heroes of the work, we find ourselves in the thick of the Pugachev uprising, but even in these difficult times there is a place for true, pure love and sincere gratitude. The main character of the story is Pyotr Grinev. His father sends him to serve, but not to St. Petersburg, as his son wanted, but to the remote Belogorsk fortress, located near Orenburg. Savelich, his uncle, also goes with the master’s son. On the way, they get caught in a terrible snowstorm and lose their way. A simple man comes to their aid, who shows the way only by signs known to him. Peter was very glad to be rescued, so he decided to thank the counselor, since without him in the open steppe they could have died from the cold. As a token of gratitude, he gives the savior a hare sheepskin coat. As the reader later finds out, the man who showed the way to Pyotr Grinev is Emelyan Pugachev, the leader of the popular uprising. The heroes are destined to meet again on the pages of the work. But now Pugachev, as a token of gratitude for the sheepskin coat and for the service that the main character provided to the rebel, has mercy on Peter and gives him life, canceling the death sentence. Both heroes perform good deeds from the bottom of their hearts, without expecting gratitude or appreciation. Giving thanks is easy and pleasant, and sometimes gratitude can save a life. These conclusions become a real discovery for the reader and teach him not to spare his “thank you.”
  2. V.G. Rasputin "French Lessons". The feeling of gratitude is born in one minute, but can live in a person’s heart for many years. Once upon a time in the soul of a teenager - the hero of a story by V.G. Rasputin’s “French Lessons” gave birth to a feeling of gratitude to Lydia Mikhailovna, the French teacher, not only for school lessons, but also for lessons in wisdom and morality. The narrator lived in a village where there was no secondary school, so he was sent to study in the regional center. He was the first to leave a remote village to study far from home. He had to endure many trials that befell him. The food that his mother sent from home ran out very quickly, and due to anemia, the boy needed to eat well. Then the hero agreed to play “chika” for money with the older boys. He won a ruble, which he used to buy milk for himself. Once seeing a capable, purposeful, intelligent student in a hungry, awkward, unkempt village boy without maternal care, Lidia Mikhailovna tries in every way to help him, support him, guide him on the right path: she studies with him extra, tries to come up with a way to feed him and even persuades him the boy to play “at the wall” with her for money. The director caught them doing this, and the teacher had to resign and leave. Only after becoming an adult does the narrator understand how much Lydia Mikhailovna has done for him. For the sake of his bright future, she sacrificed her career and well-established life. Therefore, his gratitude to her is a work of art.
  3. Tea. The works of Chingiz Aitmatov, a Russian and Kyrgyz writer, touch on all the most important problems of our lives, so they remain relevant to this day. His books about kindness, compassion, mercy, and true love do not leave readers indifferent, and the life stories of his characters touch the most sensitive strings of the soul. One of the classic’s works is the story “The First Teacher,” in which an orphan who has matured, studied, and came out into the world speaks with gratitude about her first teacher, thanks to whom she became a famous person in the world of science. The main character of the story is Altynai. She is an orphan who was raised by a soulless, callous aunt. The girl did not see any affection, no care, no friendly smile from her, did not hear a single kind word. As a fifteen-year-old girl, she was forcibly sold as a wife, although she was younger in age than her husband’s children. Duishen, her first teacher, found the strength and courage to resist traditions and helped the girl escape from the hell into which she found herself. This is a man with a huge heart. He created a school in a barn in the village to teach Kyrgyz children, to give them joy, the warmth of his soul, and to expand the boundaries of the world for them. Duishen wants to snatch Altynai from the village and give her a happy future. He sends her to study in the city, where she receives an education, devotes herself to science and becomes a famous person. But a feeling of gratitude to Duishen, who pushed her towards a bright future, has lived in her heart all these years.
  4. A.I. Kuprin “Wonderful Doctor”. Story by A.I. Kuprin’s “The Wonderful Doctor” has been used by us more than once as an argument. This work is small in volume, but very bright and kind, telling about a person with a huge heart, about compassion, mercy, and sincerity. The Mertsalov family found itself in difficult life circumstances: the father of the family was left without work, so the family was forced to live in the basement, where it was damp and cold. The youngest daughter was seriously ill, but there was no money for firewood, food, or medicine for Mashutka. Driven to despair, Mertsalov decided to take his own life and would probably have realized his idea if not for Dr. Pirogov, a famous surgeon. He could not pass by a man sitting alone in the park, realizing that he was clearly worried about something. After listening to Mertsalov, the doctor without hesitation rushes to help the family. Like a good wizard, he brings a Christmas miracle to the Mertsalovs’ dark and cold home. Firewood, food, and medicine appeared for the girl, and the father avoided the sin of suicide. The doctor instills great hope in each family member, and soon everything changes in their lives. The father found a job, the mother got back on her feet, the girl recovered, and the brothers managed to get enrolled in the gymnasium at public expense. Ordinary human kindness and compassion saved an entire family. At the end of the work, the author notes that he heard this story more than once from Grigory Mertsalov, who already held a high position in the bank and was known as a model of decency and honesty. He often tells this Christmas story and each time he ends his story with words of regret that he could not personally express gratitude to the doctor who performed a miracle for them. Thus, the author encourages readers not to delay gratitude, but more often to express sincere gratitude to those people who also work miracles for us.

OGE essay “Gratitude”: examples and arguments from life

Arguments for an essay on the topic “Gratitude” “How does the ability to be grateful characterize a person” based on your life experience

  1. If a person knows how to appreciate the kind attitude of other people, then he knows how to be grateful. I am eternally grateful to my friends who supported me in difficult times. Their care and attention helped me survive when my mother became seriously ill. It was important to me that I was not alone, that there were people who were ready to help. Mom, fortunately, recovered quickly, and I am still grateful to my friends for their support.
  2. I recently read a letter from a teacher on the Internet. It said that the students accused her of poorly preparing them for the exams and that is why they passed the exams with low scores. She writes about this with bitterness, trying to understand whether she really is a bad teacher. In my opinion, such an accusation against a teacher is a manifestation of ingratitude, selfishness, and unwillingness to accept that they themselves were not sufficiently prepared for the exam. Such an act characterizes these guys as callous and ungrateful people, unable to appreciate kindness.
  3. The war ended a long time ago, our generation knows about it only from the stories of our elders and from books. Even in early childhood, my parents told me a lot about war heroes, about the hardships that front-line soldiers and their families had to overcome. Mom and Dad believe that we must keep in our souls gratitude to those people who were able to defeat fascism. Grateful descendants, keeping the memory of the war heroes in their hearts, will pass this memory on to their children. The ability to be grateful characterizes an honest and kind person.
  4. At the end of November we celebrate Mother's Day. In my opinion, this is a holiday that allows us to once again say words of gratitude to mothers for their work, for their love and kindness. Of course, we must not forget about mothers on ordinary days, be able to thank them, and delight them with our successes. The gratitude of children is very important; it proves that the son or daughter has grown up and knows how to appreciate goodness, and is able to show attention and love.
  5. My mother taught me to be able to thank those who helped and who showed concern. She believes that being grateful marks an honest and decent person. Mom’s lessons were not in vain, I appreciate other people’s help and always thank you. For example, I will never forget the doctors who helped me get back on my feet after an injury at a competition. They were real professionals, and thanks to them I don’t feel pain and continue to play sports.

Sample essay-discussion on the topic “Gratitude”

Arguments from life

  1. We are often grateful to our loved ones, because they are the ones who are next to us in difficult moments of life, they support us with advice, help, do not let us lose heart, and share the warmth of their souls with us. This gratitude, in my opinion, cannot be eradicated or killed. My grandmother has been gone for a long time, but to this day I am grateful to her for raising me, educating me, teaching me to be kind, wise, and patient. She gave all the love that was in the soul of this simple, uneducated peasant woman to her grandchildren, children, neighbors, and relatives. She loved everyone and was friendly to everyone. Despite the fact that my grandmother only had a few years of education, she was a wise woman, so people often turned to her for advice. With some incredible feminine instinct, she guessed how to act in a given situation, she never lied, was not rude, and did not offend anyone. She taught me these simple things too. For wise lessons, kind fairy tales, tender care, sincere love, for trips to the river and friendly conversations, I am eternally grateful to my grandmother. And I am also grateful to her for the delicious pancakes, which, it seems, only she knew how to bake, for the millet porridge from the oven and baked apples, for that incredible taste of childhood that remained with me for the rest of my life. In who and what I have become, there is a particle of her soul and concerns. Thank you, my beloved little man, for everything!

Arguments from folk wisdom

  1. “Don’t be sorry for your own thanks, but don’t expect someone else’s,” says the Russian proverb. It says that you don’t need to skimp on gratitude if a person has done you a good deed, but you also shouldn’t wait for someone else’s gratitude if you’ve done it to someone, says a Russian proverb. She notes that it is good to help a grateful person who remembers the good that was done for him.
  2. “Tear yourself in two - they will say: why not in four?” - says a Russian proverb about ungrateful people who can accuse someone who has done good for them of insufficient zeal and effort.
  3. “Great word: thank you,” the Russian people believed. He noted that the word thank you is a great word because it expresses sincere gratitude.
  4. “Don’t feed me bread, and don’t hit me in the back with a brick!” - said the Russian people in a proverb. These words are used to address those who are being provided with some kind of service. They don’t ask for gratitude in return, but they also hope that they won’t receive black ingratitude.
  5. “Having done good, do not repent,” says the Russian proverb. Our ancestors believed that if you did a good deed for someone, then there was no need to repent and expect gratitude.
  6. “If you say thank you, that’s fine, but if you don’t, that’s fine,” says a Russian proverb. It says that people do not expect gratitude, but if they receive it, they are sincerely happy about it.
  7. “I am his roll, and he hits me in the back with a brick,” says a Russian proverb about people who repay blacks with ingratitude in return for good done.
  8. “He is good who gives water and food, and he who remembers bread and salt is not bad,” says a Russian proverb. It praises a person who spares neither bread nor salt for others, but the one who pays for them with sincere gratitude is also worthy of praise.
  9. “If he drowned, he promised an ax; pulled out - and it’s a pity for the ax,” says a Russian proverb. It talks about people who, in moments when help is needed, promise a lot, but remain ungrateful when help has already been provided.

Essay on the topic What is gratitude?

When a person helps someone, no matter how: with kind words of support, sympathy or perfect deeds, a feeling of gratitude arises in response, I want to say a banal “thank you.” Unfortunately, not all people know how and want to express their emotions; they often simply forget to thank the person.

I believe that it is necessary to at least verbally express gratitude for the help and assistance provided. Agree, everyone will be pleased when they are thanked; their soul becomes warm and their mood lifts. For some reason, good deeds are quickly forgotten, but bad deeds are remembered for a long time. Not to be unfounded, an ordinary case from life: a grandson was climbing trees and tore his pants, he was upset because his mother would scold him, and his grandmother, silently, took them and sewed them up, and did not even hear a thank you in response. We often take help for granted without thinking about expressing gratitude.

I think that you need to do good deeds just at the behest of your heart, without expecting to be praised. For example, I help children in orphanages. I’m not bragging and I’m sure that everyone can do something similar, just have the desire and work. Using the Internet, I post advertisements in social groups about collecting clothes and toys for children. Thus, with our joint efforts, we have already handed over things and toys to the children 3 times. I can't express in words how warmly the kids thanked us, they drew funny pictures, hugged and kissed us and told us "thank you" several times. We became frequent guests and grew to love them. I burst into tears from an overabundance of feelings, as I was touched to the depths of my soul, direct gratitude works wonders. It seems to me that kindness should be returned with kindness, because after such gratitude you want to move mountains, plunge headlong into work and again and again perform sincere and humane actions.

Be sure to express your gratitude, thank each other, don’t forget to say kind words, make the world kinder, fill it with light! Strive to ensure that the number of words “thank you” said grows exponentially along with the help provided.

OGE, Unified State Exam grade 9, grade 11

Other essays: ← What is courage↑ 9th grade and OGEWhat is devotion →

Aphorisms

  1. “All our complaints that life is difficult and unbearable, our complaints about what we are deprived of, stem from a lack of gratitude for what we have,” argued the English writer and publicist Daniel Defoe. In his opinion, a person should be grateful for everything he has and not complain about fate.
  2. “Gratitude is a debt that must be paid, but which no one has the right to expect,” said the French philosopher, writer and thinker Jean-Jacques Rousseau. He compared gratitude to a debt that needs to be paid, but still no one should expect this payment.
  3. “Gratitude is a sign of the nobility of the soul,” said the legendary ancient Greek poet and fabulist Aesop. He noted that only people with a noble soul are grateful.
  4. “Gratitude is one of the greatest virtues. But an even greater virtue is a sense of proportion in the claim to gratitude,” German playwright Christian Friedrich Hebbel. He considered gratitude a great virtue, greater than which is still a sense of proportion in the claim to gratitude.
  5. “The best accompaniment to all the pleasures on earth is the gratitude of those we love,” said Paul Bragg, a promoter of a healthy lifestyle. In his opinion, great happiness and pleasure for a person is the gratitude of loved ones.
  6. “Gratitude is a surefire way to bring more into your life. You breathe - be grateful for it, you have eyes, arms, legs, you can see this light, you can hear the sounds of nature, human voices, feel the blow of the wind. Give thanks for everything that surrounds you. Don't focus on what you're missing. Be grateful for what you already have!” - says our contemporary, psychologist Vitaly Gibert. He assures us that we need to be grateful for everything that we have, that fate has given us. Gratitude, according to Gibert, is the best way to get more out of life.
  7. “The feeling of gratitude is a reliable test of a person’s moral qualities,” wrote professor, doctor of medical sciences Ilya Shevelev. In his opinion, a person can be tested by a feeling of gratitude. A grateful person has positive moral qualities, while an ungrateful person does not.
  8. “If someone has offended you, be grateful to him for giving you the opportunity to feel a deep wound,” says the Indian mystic Osho. He advised to be grateful even for an insult, since the mental wound inflicted by the offender provides a certain experience.
  9. “Let him who gave be silent; let the one who received speak,” urged Miguel de Cervantes, a famous Spanish writer. He believed that a person who provided a service should not ask or expect gratitude. And the one to whom it was given should be grateful for it.
  10. “Perhaps love is nothing more than a feeling of gratitude for pleasure,” said the French writer Honore de Balzac. He considered love to be a feeling of gratitude for pleasant, positive emotions and pleasure.

"Give thanks and be grateful"

"Give thanks and be grateful"

Sergei Ivanovich Ozhegov said: “Gratitude is a feeling of gratitude to someone for the kindness, attention, service rendered.”

I have the same opinion about the concept of gratitude. You should not be afraid to give thanks and be grateful. After all, the word “thank you” is not difficult to say, and the person to whom you say it will be pleased. With this word you can win over a person and show him your gratitude. It can be expressed to all living things. In my life I am grateful to many people: family, friends, educators, mentors, teachers.

First of all, I want to thank my family. For understanding, care, kindness, attention and love. My loved ones love me for who I am. I can ask for help at any time, find out their opinion on any matter, have a heart-to-heart talk. And I know: they will not refuse me anything. They always support me in my endeavors and rejoice at my successes. I am grateful to my parents for the fact that they have been together for many years and there are three of us children in the family. For the family hearth that my mother created and we all support it. I have a friendly family and it’s worth a lot! I am grateful to my grandparents for the fact that they are always waiting for me to visit, they always feed me, this is their specialty. I can turn to them and complain about my parents when they disagree with me. I am incredibly grateful to my loved ones.

Understanding gratitude comes with age; I am only now beginning to understand that I am grateful to the teachers in the nursery and kindergarten for their patience and love. Now I'm studying at school, and my mentors are teachers. Thanks to them, I develop, educate myself and build my future. They give me knowledge, thereby helping me decide in life. For me, a teacher is an assistant in any situation and a wise friend. While studying at a music school, I came across an amazing person - Galina Nikolaevna. I am eternally grateful to her for his work, patience and love for his work. Thanks to Galina Nikolaevna, I graduated from music school, began to understand music and understand it. She taught me to feel music and enjoy it.

I think that I am a happy person. After all, I can say with confidence that the best people are around me. In my environment there are people who are ready to help at any time, who share my interests with me, who are ready to give in to me in something. I call these people friends, close friends. Without them, I would not have known what friendship is. I am grateful to them for the time we spend together.

Gratitude comes from the word good, that is, to give good. For there to be good in the world, we need to be able to give thanks and accept gratitude. Since we live in a society, we need communication and we thereby thank a person for living on Earth and for the fact that fate brought you together.

Essay by a student of grade 9 “B” at MBOU Gymnasium No. 2, Sarova.

Nomination: scripts and essays. The topic is “Thank you...”.

The title of the work is “Giving Thanks and Being Grateful”

Source: vk.com

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