Roughly two decades ago I came across the concept of "YayMe.txt".

This fella described how he keeps a file on his computer, and everyday when something nice happens he'll open up that text file and write down the date with whatever the nice thing was.

It might be that he rode his bike to work that day instead of driving the car. Or a client who sent a nice email to show their appreciation. He just keeps adding to the YayMe.txt file, so that over time it becomes a compendium of good things that have happened in his life. Mostly, things that reflect on himself.

Because we have no trouble reminding ourselves that we are too old, or too fat, or too bald, or too slow, or lack skills, or lack confidence, or whatever. We do this all day every day without even trying. YayMe.txt is a way to try and remember that there are good things in your world, and that for the most part you are one of those good things.

Two decades later I have a file in my notepad titled "YayMe.txt", where I drop screenshots of those emails and posts and whatever else that marks today as a good day. I start a new one each year, because the note file gets very full.

#YayMeDotText
@ewen Thank you for sharing this. I really should start this habit and I love the idea of doing one for each year. I'll just create a Yay Me folder in my dropbox and start doing this today because this is so tru. It is easy to negative self talk, it is a lot harder to talk ourselves up and we really should do more of the latter than the former.
@blindbat84

That's a cool way to do it, as a Dropbox folder. The file would have a timestamp and that ensures the chronology is still retained. I like it :)
@ewen It also means I'll never lose it hopefully. One Drive or Google Drive would also work, but I prefer Dropbox functionality myself. I started with Friday because I actually got an appreciation email from my boss, which was actually very needed that day. I've added its text to this file. Thank you again for this.