The Denver Post

Why are some people more resilient than others?

- By Eilene Zimmerman

A few years ago, an unimaginab­le thing happened in my life. I wanted to help someone I cared about, someone who was sick with an illness he was hiding. I went to his house, intent on a rescue operation that would end, I thought, with a trip to the emergency room. Instead, it ended with a trip to the morgue. What I found when I arrived was my ex-husband, dead on his bathroom floor. The hidden illness? An intravenou­s drug addiction.

It was, without question, the most traumatic event of my life, but not only mine. I had two teenage children at the time, who had unknowingl­y been given a front-row seat to their father’s slow suicide. It took two years for me to settle my ex-husband’s estate, which was thrown into probate, and meant a kind of suspended traumatic animation for me, as I continued to live in what felt like a constant state of emergency.

Back then, I thought we would never really recover, that our lives would always be stained with this terrible sadness. But now, nearly five years later, we’re doing well — really well. Or we were, until recently, when along with the rest of the world we began living through the current convergenc­e of crises.

It turns out that awful time in my life was good training for a pandemic, for political and social upheaval, for economic and financial uncertaint­y. The experience taught me that I never really know what’s going to happen next. I plan as best I can, but now I’m far more able to pivot my thinking. I have the capacity to cope with more of life’s unexpected slings and arrows, to accept the difficulti­es I face and keep going, even though it can be hard.

How we navigate a crisis or traumatic event (and the coronaviru­s has many characteri­stics of trauma because it is unpredicta­ble and uncontroll­able) depends, in large part, on how resilient we are. Resilience is the ability to recover from difficult experience­s and setbacks, to adapt, move forward and sometimes even experience growth.

An individual’s resilience is dictated by a combinatio­n of genetics, personal history, environmen­t and situationa­l context. So far, research has found the genetic part to be relatively small.

“The way I think about it is that there are temperamen­tal or personalit­y characteri­stics that are geneticall­y influenced, like risk-taking, or whether you’re an introvert or extrovert,” said Karestan Koenen, professor of psychiatri­c epidemiolo­gy at Harvard’s T.H. Chan School of Public Health.

Koenen studies how genes shape our risk of post-traumatic stress disorder. “We all know people that are just very eventemper­ed,” she said.

“Some of that is simply how we’re built physiologi­cally.” Yet it isn’t true that some people are born more resilient than others, said Koenen, “That’s because almost any trait can be a positive or negative, depending on the situation.”

Past history

Far more important, it seems, is an individual’s history.

The most significan­t determinan­t of resilience — noted in nearly every review or study of resilience in the last 50 years — is the quality of our close personal relationsh­ips, especially with parents and primary caregivers. Early attachment­s to parents play a crucial, lifelong role in human adaptation.

“How loved you felt as a child is a great predictor of how you manage all kinds of difficult situations later in life,” said Bessel van der Kolk, a professor of psychiatry at Boston University School of Medicine who has been researchin­g posttrauma­tic stress since the 1970s. He is the founder of the Trauma Research Foundation in Boston.

Van der Kolk said longterm studies showed that the first 20 years of life were especially critical. “Different traumas at different ages have their own impacts on our perception­s, interpreta­tions and expectatio­ns; these early experience­s sculpt the brain, because it is a usedepende­nt organ,” he said.

You can think of resilience as a set of skills that can be, and often is, learned. Part of the skillbuild­ing comes from exposure to very difficult — but manageable — experience­s, like the one my children and I had.

“Stress isn’t all bad,” said Steven Southwick, professor emeritus of psychiatry, PTSD and Resilience at Yale University School of Medicine and co-author of the book “Resilience: The Science of Mastering Life’s Greatest Challenges.” If you can cope today with all that’s happening in the world around you, Southwick said, “then when you are on the other side of it, you’ll be stronger.”

How we cope depends on what is in our resilience toolbox. For some people, like my ex-husband, the toolbox is filled with drugs. For others it can be drinking, overeating, gambling, shopping. But these don’t promote resilience.

Instead, the tools common to resilient people are optimism (that is also realistic), a moral compass, religious or spiritual beliefs, cognitive and emotional flexibilit­y, and social connectedn­ess. The most resilient among us are people who generally don’t dwell on the negative, who look for opportunit­ies that might exist even in the darkest times. During a quarantine, for example, a resilient person might decide it is a good time to start a meditation practice, take an online course or learn to play guitar.

“Many, many resilient people learn to carefully accept what they can’t change about a situation and then ask themselves what they can actually change,” Southwick said. Conversely, fretting endlessly about not being able to change things has the opposite effect, lessening your ability to cope.

In my fieldwork now as a social work student, I provide support for people who have cancer — also a traumatic experience — and I often counsel them to stay grounded in the present moment and focus on their strengths, because imagining every worstcase scenario is pointless and only increases anxiety.

“Each of us has to figure out what our particular challenges are and then determine how to get through them, at the current moment in time,” advised George Bonanno, a professor of clinical psychology and director of the Loss, Trauma, and Emotion Lab at Columbia University Teachers College. The good news, he said, is that most of us will. Bonanno’s lab reviewed 67 studies of people who experience­d all kinds of traumatic events. “I’m talking mass shootings, hurricanes, spinal cord injuries, things like that,” he said. “And two-thirds were found to be resilient. Twothirds

were able to function very well in a short period of time.”

How to build resilience

Interviews with large numbers of highly resilient individual­s — those who have experience­d a great deal of adversity and have come through it successful­ly — show they share the following characteri­stics.

• They have a positive, realistic outlook. They don’t dwell on negative informatio­n and instead look for opportunit­ies in bleak situations, striving to find the positive within the negative.

• They have a moral compass. Highly resilient people have a solid sense of what they consider right and wrong, and it tends to guide their decisions.

• They have a belief in something greater than themselves. This is often found through religious or spiritual practices. The community support that comes from being part of a religion also enhances resilience.

• They are altruistic; they have a concern for others and a degree of selflessne­ss.

• They accept what they cannot change and focus energy on what they can change. Southwick says resilient people reappraise a difficult situation and look for meaningful opportunit­ies within it.

• They have a mission, a meaning, a purpose. Feeling committed to a meaningful mission in life gives them courage and strength.

• They have a social support system, and they support others. “Very few resilient people,” said Southwick, “go it alone.”

 ?? Times Co. Monika Aichele, © The New York ?? How we navigate a crisis or traumatic event (and the coronaviru­s has many characteri­stics of trauma because it is unpredicta­ble and uncontroll­able) depends, in large part, on how resilient we are.
Times Co. Monika Aichele, © The New York How we navigate a crisis or traumatic event (and the coronaviru­s has many characteri­stics of trauma because it is unpredicta­ble and uncontroll­able) depends, in large part, on how resilient we are.

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