Your Type
You rarely voice your thanks, instead quietly noting it and finding opportunities to help them through practical actions. This insistence on "substituting verbal expression with concrete labor" actually reflects your underlying distrust that "verbal communication is hypocritical and unreliable"; you fear that easily spoken thanks are mere social pleasantries, so you use "taking action" to ensure your sincerity is impeccable. But actions can sometimes make the present moment seem cold due to their delay. Try simply saying "I'll keep this in my heart" before you take action; when you learn to let words precede actions, your gratitude will give the other person more security.
💡 Did you know?
Behavioral psychology research finds that people who 'express gratitude through action' build 31% higher reciprocal trust in relationships than verbal expressers. This is because actions require real cost, making recipients perceive higher sincerity and trustworthiness.
PsyPals · psypals.com