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  • You just feel like you are climbing a mountain every day.

  • And every day you get up and the same mountain is ahead of you.

  • My wee girl Abi, who was 12 at the time,

  • hopped in the car with her best friend Ella, and Ella's mum,

  • who was also a really dear friend of mine.

  • And on the way down, a driver sped straight through a stop sign,

  • crashed into them and killed all three of them.

  • So I just have this peculiar insight really that

  • I've done the academic study,

  • I've trawled over all of the research -

  • and then I've had to really test

  • what works in a really, obviously horrifically personal way.

  • And I can say that I feel really lucky now

  • because having had that training,

  • I did at least have some tools at my fingertips.

  • But I want to make a really important point here,

  • that too often people focus on resilience

  • thinking it's just a personal thing,

  • and actually we know that it's much, much bigger than that.

  • Not seeing yourself represented in society

  • is potentially damaging for your resilience,

  • whether it's race, sexuality, ability, mental illness.

  • Any form of prejudice like that -

  • that feeling that you don't belong,

  • you're not seen and you're not heard -

  • is hurtful and reductive when it comes to resilience.

  • So why is it important for a country to be resilient?

  • Because it enables us to mobilise our resources faster.

  • And in that I mean everything from portaloos to trust.

  • Think about our ever-changing environments

  • that we know we all live in nowadays -

  • bushfires, Covid, the earthquakes.

  • Change and adversity come thick and fast

  • and resilient societies, resilient nations, are so much better able

  • to respond in that time.

  • To be able to protect their weak, their vulnerable,

  • to be able to protect the economy - to weather whatever comes

  • in a much better way.

  • So, on that personal perspective, the good news is that research shows

  • that resilience really requires what we call "ordinary magic".

  • It's not some elusive trait that is only available to a few.

  • We can teach people to be more resilient.

  • The three strategies that I relied on when the girls died,

  • and to be fair, I absolutely still rely on now,

  • I've wheeled them all out again recently, are...

  • Whether it is divorce or redundancy, losing a partner -

  • really tough things happen to us all.

  • So knowing that, going into this terrible experience,

  • knowing that adversity was common and that suffering was common,

  • really did make a difference because it prevented me

  • from feeling singled out.

  • We get sucked into what we call in psychology

  • a negativity bias.

  • We're really good, humans, at looking at all the crappy bits.

  • But actually we're not so good at tuning into the good stuff.

  • And it's really, really important for us to counterbalance that

  • by choosing to focus our attention on some of the good stuff.

  • "Is the way I'm thinking,

  • is the way I'm acting right now, helping or harming me

  • in my quest to get through this?"

  • All too often people think that resilience is about that

  • good old stiff upper lip. And it's not that at all.

  • Studies have shown that having strong, supportive relationships

  • is probably the most important thing we can do to build resilience.

  • We were really lucky.

  • We had a really supportive community, who helped us.

  • And all of this is what you need when you navigate trauma and adversity.

  • Nobody goes it alone.

  • And one of the key researchers in the field, Chris Peterson, used to say:

  • That that was the three-word summary of his decades of research.

You just feel like you are climbing a mountain every day.

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三種寶貴的工具來提高你的應變能力|BBC Ideas (Three invaluable tools to boost your resilience | BBC Ideas)

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    Summer 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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