When I first saw the question I thought, “How can anyone not be grateful?” However, as I began the task of making three daily things list, I realized I have much room for improvement. I know in my heart that I am grateful for the big accomplishments in life. However, I should be thankful for even the smallest amounts of positive I experience each day. By writing down “three good things” in my daily life, it taught me to leave no stone un-turned. It helped me to appreciate every moment I had with my wife, kids, and speaking engagements. As I began putting a draft together, I realized combing my life experience with the fact-based evidence was hard to format. I feel like I have enough material to write a book on this subject but I am confused about the details of the formatting process, and I found that incredibly frustrating. I almost have anxiety because I know I have lived this and I have the answers from my point of view but putting that to paper in an educational formatted way is difficult. Generally, in my process, I use the spider web theory I was taught in grade school to map out all my ideas. I break down each topic into subheadings and before you know it I am done. With this paper, my sources were given to me, and I relied heavily on a few to add vitality to my article. For future drafts, I am going to focus on formatting and condensing my life experience of “three good things” into one main theme. The best thing about a draft is that is can take a ton of red ink and its never a finished product.