How to Improve Spiritual Health by Celebrating Small Wins

A man in his late 30s sits cross-legged on a worn hardwood floor in a warmly lit living room during early morning, eyes closed in calm reflection with a faint smile, a small open journal and pen resting on a low coffee table beside a steaming ceramic mug of coffee, soft golden sunlight streaming through a large window and casting long shadows across the floor, a modest bookshelf with stacked books and a small potted plant softly blurred in the background
Wondering how to improve spiritual health and actually stick with it? Discover the gas tank framework for building spiritual habits that last.

Most of what gets written about spiritual health focuses on what to do: meditate, journal, get outside, connect with community. That’s not wrong, but it misses the harder problem. The field tends to treat spiritual health like a knowledge gap when it’s almost never that. The patients I’ve worked with who struggle most already know what would help them. What they don’t have is the structure and understanding of where to start, especially after a hospitalization, a setback, or a season where nothing has gone right.

The Reality Is That Change Is a Choice

At The Public Wellness Project, we partner with people who are choosing change for the first time. We give them the structure and support they need to finally start making progress with their health.

When the frustration of stagnation creates enough motivation to finally move forward — what now? That’s the question this post answers.

Think of your motivation like a gas tank. You start full. Then life happens, and the tank starts to dwindle. The goal isn’t to run on empty — it’s to keep refilling along the way.

Knowing what to do and actually doing it are two different problems entirely.

What Are the Benefits of Spiritual Health?

Spiritual health is one pillar of whole-person well-being. It sits alongside physical and mental health, and it doesn’t work well when you ignore it.

When spiritual health is strong, people tend to have a clearer sense of purpose. They handle stress better. They regulate emotions more steadily and feel connected to something larger than their immediate circumstances.

According to a Gallup study cited by Banner Health, 43% of Americans belong to a church or other religious body. That’s one path. It’s not the only one.

I had a patient early in my career, post-stroke, home from rehab, living alone, who told me she used to pray every morning but hadn’t since her husband died three years before her hospitalization. She knew exactly what had helped her. She knew exactly when she stopped. What had changed wasn’t her knowledge of what to do spiritually. It was that she no longer had anyone to do it for. That conversation changed how I approach this gap. The question was never what she should do. It was what would make it mean something again.

Whether or not you sit in a pew, spiritual health requires active and consistent tending. That’s where most people stall out.

Formal faith community or not — the gap between knowing and doing is the same for almost everyone.

8 Ways to Improve Your Spiritual Health

The research across Banner Health, Mind Help, Illinois State, and Mental Health America points to the same core habits. These aren’t complicated. They’re just easy to skip.

Mindfulness and Meditation

Illinois State recommends starting with five to ten minutes a day. That’s it. Small, doable, and repeatable is the whole point.

Prayer or Connection to a Higher Power

Faith-based or secular, the mechanism is the same. Intentional quiet creates space for reflection that ordinary daily noise doesn’t allow.

Journaling

One values-based prompt per day is enough. Mind Help, Illinois State, and Mental Health America all land on journaling as a consistent spiritual health builder.

Time in Nature

Banner Health and Mind Help both flag this one. It’s low-barrier and grounding. You don’t need a plan — you just need to go outside.

Acts of Kindness and Service

Volunteering and helping others show up repeatedly across sources as spiritual health accelerators. Mind Help, Mental Health America, and Banner Health all point here.

What would helping someone else actually look like in your life right now, not in general, but given your real schedule, your real energy, and the people already around you?

Gratitude Practice

Intentionally noticing what’s going right is a daily discipline, not a feeling you wait for. You build it the same way you build any other habit — you show up for it.

Connection to a Faith Community or Trusted Person

Belonging matters. Isolation stalls spiritual growth. This doesn’t have to be formal — it just has to be real.

Solitude and Silence

Scheduled stillness is a deliberate counter to noise. Most people don’t have too little information about spiritual health — they have too little quiet to actually process any of it.

Every one of these practices comes down to the same thing: deliberately returning to what you actually value. The tactics are just containers. What makes them land for a real patient, or fall flat, is whether they’re attached to something that person already cares about. Purpose doesn’t come from the practice. The practice surfaces the purpose that’s already there.

How Spirituality Helps — Refilling the Gas Tank Along the Way

When you set out to build a new habit with fresh motivation, you start with a full tank. As the weeks go on and you work to create consistency, that tank starts to dwindle.

Say you’re walking five days a week. Then a snowstorm hits. You can’t get outside for five days. You walk twice instead. Now you’ve got less gas in the tank to regain consistency next week.

But here’s the thing — if you celebrate the progress along the way, you never have to run on empty.

The key to keeping up with a new routine is celebrating the progress, not just the finish line.

When you walk three times in a week, celebrate it. That doesn’t take away from the fact that you still want to work up to five days. It’s not lowering the bar. It’s refilling the tank so you can get back to the bar.

Apply this directly to how to improve spiritual health. When you meditate three days instead of seven, celebrate the three. When you journal twice instead of every day, celebrate the twice. Then come back.

As I often say: “If you get in the habit of celebrating each step along the way like it’s the final result, you are far more likely to accomplish your goals and make sustainable changes to improve your health and your life.”

What you’re not changing, you’re choosing. When you choose to grow spiritually, the gas tank has to stay full. Celebrating small wins is how you do that.

6 Benefits of Daily Spiritual Practice

Here’s what consistent spiritual practice actually returns. These aren’t abstract — they show up in real life, in measurable ways.

Purpose and Meaning

Daily practice anchors you to something larger than the immediate frustration. That anchor holds when circumstances get hard.

Emotional Resilience

Spiritual habits build an internal resource. That resource absorbs life’s disruptions instead of letting them knock the whole routine flat.

Improved Mental Health

The mind-body-spirit connection isn’t a metaphor. It’s a mechanism. Spiritual practice affects mental health through real, documented pathways.

Greater Self-Awareness

Reflection practices — journaling, meditation, prayer — surface the values that guide decision-making. You can’t act on values you haven’t identified.

Stronger Relationships

People connected to a spiritual practice tend toward greater empathy. Empathy makes relationships more durable under stress.

Sustainable Motivation

This is the benefit most relevant to this post. Daily spiritual practice keeps the gas tank from running dry. It’s not just a nice outcome — it’s the whole mechanism that makes every other benefit possible.

Every Season Isn’t a Season of Growth — But When You Choose Change, Keep the Tank Full

Every season isn’t a season of growth. That’s human, not failure. There will be snowstorms. There will be weeks where you meditate twice instead of seven times and journal once instead of every day.

When the season does call for change, the practices are simple. Five to ten minutes of quiet. One journal prompt about what you value. One act of kindness. And a genuine celebration of each step taken.

The gas tank doesn’t refill itself. Neither does spiritual health. But both respond immediately when you show up — even partially, even imperfectly, even just twice this week instead of seven times.

What you’re not changing, you’re choosing. When you choose to grow, keep the tank full along the way.

The gap between knowing and doing is not a knowledge problem. It never has been. People know what would help them, they knew before they picked up this post. What closes that gap is a reason that actually belongs to them, and a structure that makes showing up feel worth it even when it’s imperfect. That’s what any of this is really about.

If you want a simple place to start, take our free Daily Health Audit. It takes a few minutes, and it’ll show you exactly where your health — spiritual and otherwise — stands right now. That’s the first step toward keeping the tank full.

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The Daily Health Audit

Fill out this self-assessment guide to help you identify what’s working well in your health habits and where there’s room for improvement.

How would you rate your health?

Sleep

The following questions are about your typical sleep patterns.
Are you satisfied with your sleep?*
Do you sleep between 6 and 8 hours per night?*
Do you spend less than 30 minutes awake during the night (falling asleep + awakenings)?*

Social Connection

The following questions are about how connected you feel to others.
I feel connected to people who care about me.*
I have at least one person I can turn to in times of need.*
I regularly spend quality time with friends, family, or community.*

Stress Management

The questions in this scale ask you about your feelings and thoughts during the last month.
In the last month, how often have you felt calm and in control?*
How often have you felt confident about handling your personal problems?*
How often have you felt that you can manage unexpected challenges effectively?*

Physical Activity

Please answer these questions based on your typical week.
Do you get at least 150 minutes of moderate or vigorous activity weekly? (where your heartbeat increases and you breathe faster (e.g. brisk walking, cycling as means of transport or as exercise, heavy gardening, running or recreational sports)*
Do you do muscle-strengthening exercises at least 2 times per week?*

Nutrition

The following questions are about your typical eating patterns.
I eat at least 5 servings of fruits or vegetables most days.*
I include whole grains and plant-based proteins in my meals regularly.*
I limit ultra-processed foods and sugary drinks.*

Avoidance of Risky Substances

Please answer the following questions based on the past 12 months.
I avoid tobacco and nicotine products.*
I avoid binge drinking (more than 4 drinks in a sitting).*
I do not misuse prescription or recreational drugs.*
Based on your previous responses, what area of your health do you believe has the biggest area for improvement?
What would be the next sign of progress for you with this area of your health?
What action do you need to take to create that change?