Woman on trail admiring the sunset with clouds and fog.
Articles

5 Ways Grateful Living Empowers You to Live a More Meaningful Life

by Joe Primo, Grateful Living
Discover five ways that committing to a grateful orientation and daily practice empowers you to…
Light shining through a large window.
Practices

You Are Here: Awakening to the Opportunities of Today

by Joe Primo, Grateful Living
A daily practice to empower yourself by awakening to the opportunities of the day ahead…
Person blowing bubbles
Articles

Rejoice and Play

by Joe Primo, Grateful Living
This essay explores play as a joyful and essential act for our well-being that can…
Man climbing stairs toward light
Articles

Compelled by Hope

by Joe Primo, Grateful Living
This essay illustrates how grateful hope prepares us to acknowledge suffering and invites us to…
Kitchen sink filled with soaking dishes, up again a sunny window and a window sill with a small radio, herbs, and a fruit bowl.
Practices

Approaching Daily Tasks with Leisure

by Joe Primo, Grateful Living
A daily practice of giving time to what requires time and deepening your relationship to…
Young woman using binoculars in a natural setting
Articles

Leisure: The Art of Loitering

by Joe Primo, Grateful Living
This essay shows how leisure is a natural outcome of living gratefully, inviting us to…
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Joe Primo - CEO, Grateful Living

Joe Primo, Grateful Living

About the author

Joe Primo is the CEO of Grateful Living. He is a passionate speaker and community-builder whose accomplishments made him a leading voice on resilience and adversity. Gratefulness for life, he believes, is foundational to discovering meaning and the only response that is big enough and appropriate for the plot twists, delights, surprises, and devastation we encounter along the way. A student of our founder since his studies at Yale Divinity School, Joe is committed to advancing our global movement and making the transformational practice of grateful living both accessible to all and integral to communities and places of belonging. His TED talk, “Grief is Good,” reframed the grief paradigm as a responsive resource. He is the author of “What Do We Tell the Children? Talking to Kids About Death and Dying” and numerous articles.