You know what I am this holiday season? Grateful.
Grateful that I chose to be an accountant. Yes, I said it out loud. On purpose.
While everyone jokes about “bean counters”, I have a front row seat to something wild.
I see people’s dreams hiding in balance sheets and bank feeds. I help those dreams not crash and burn like the turkey I left in the oven in 1982 that set off the smoke alarm, my cat and my mother all at once.
Is it glamorous? Not exactly. Is it amazing? Absolutely.
Right now, the world thinks accountants are stressed rule followers who get excited about three things:
Meanwhile, in real life, you and I get to:
That is not boring. That is power.
Holiday season adds spice. Clients are worried about:
While everyone else is shopping and pretending not to check email, we are still:
Surveys keep telling us that money is one of the top stressors for small business owners. In a July 11, 2025 Inc. Magazine article, “4 Strategies to Help Your Business Ease Cash Flow Problems,” Bruce Crumley reports that 88 percent of small and mid-sized company owners say recurring cash flow disruptions are holding them back from fully taking advantage of growth opportunities.
Do you realize what this means? There is a giant holiday miracle hiding in plain sight.
You. Me. Us.
So, in all that chaos, why do we intentionally keep choosing this work? Because there is a lot to be grateful for.
We see the before and after story.
We see:
We do not need motivational posters. We have comparative financials.
Take ten seconds and think of one client from five years ago. Look at where they were then and where they are now. You were part of that arc.
Let’s be honest. We would not survive this profession without “our people”.
The friend who answers your 8 p.m. “am I losing it or is this actually wrong” text. The colleague who shares their template instead of guarding it like nuclear codes. The mentor who told you “Raise your prices” and then stayed on Zoom while you did it.
We get labeled as number nerds and spreadsheet people. It is interesting, considering how often we keep each other alive.
Who are you grateful for this year? Did a name pop into your head? Send them a message after you read this. Go ahead. Do it right now.
A few brave souls wake up and say “I want to herd hundreds of accountants into one hotel and teach them things.”
Conference organizers do the heavy lifting so you and I can:
Those conferences are where many of us discovered we could:
We show up for CPE. We stay for the hallway conversations. We leave with new ideas and just enough courage to try them. We keep coming back because the rooms, hallways and even the bar quietly change our careers.
Is the tech perfect? No. Sometimes it behaves like a toddler with an iPad. But let’s be real.
Cloud tools, integrations and AI helpers mean:
Our software stack lets us work from anywhere, serve more clients and catch money leaks we never saw before.
If you ever reconciled a whole year by hand, entered every single transaction onto green ledger sheets or cheered when the newest tech your firm installed was an electric pencil sharpener, you are now legally required to be grateful for bank feeds.
Even when the feed breaks. Especially when it breaks. Because at least they exist.
Forums. Masterminds. Facebook groups. LinkedIn connections. Slack channels. Podcasts.
We are surrounded by communities that:
Try telling your non-accountant friends you finally standardized onboarding.
They will stare. They will gossip about you behind your back. They might even start a group chat called “Is Deb OK” asking if onboarding is a symptom they should worry about.
But your accounting community? We cheer. We throw a parade. We ask for the SOP with a copy of the checklist.
Community is where your imposter syndrome gets smaller. You realize everyone is still figuring it out. You realize you are further along than you think. And you finally believe you are the expert you already are.
This season, I am grateful for:
That is my version of holiday magic.
We may roll our eyes at year end. We may threaten to elope with a different career every April 16th. But under all of that, there is real gratitude.
We get to help people keep their businesses alive. We get to turn confusion into clarity. We get colleagues, conferences, tech and communities that make the journey lighter.
So, before you dive into the next pile of transactions, take a breath and ask, “What in my work am I grateful for today?”
Your list is probably longer than you think.