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A new year always seems to bring about a feeling of buoyancy. Though the first day of the new year does not instantly relieve us of yesterday's worries, there is a sense of renewal that invigorates our very being. We often act as if a timer has been reset.
But, what do we do in the in-between time? How do we call forth the strength to come back from otherwise adverse circumstances? Any number of situations can reduce us to feeling like there is no way to return to wholeness--no way to even consider the possibility. But time and time again, we witness the resolve of the human spirit to pierce through the weighty blanket of devastation. This month's Wise Women article asked the question, "What have you learned about the capacity for resilience?" These five women have thrived beyond potentially damaging experiences: physical, emotional and sexual abuse, domestic violence, abandonment, murder, cancer, addiction (witnessed and experienced) and war. They are undoubtedly teachers on the art of the comeback. Here are their answers: For much of my life, resilience looked like one of those plastic Bozo the Clown toys. You knocked them down and they popped right back up - and I followed suit, whether the blow was physical or emotional. Over and Over. More than once, I've had to collect the remains of myself from the rubble of tragedy. Laying there half alive, in pieces and disillusioned, I learned many lessons about resilience. Perhaps the most important was coming to understand that it is not about "bouncing back to the original form" or enduring difficulty without being changed. We rarely think about resilience until faced with a crisis. Cancer was my crisis. Yours might be a lost job, a lost love, a stubbed toe. Regardless, here is what I know. The older I get the faster I bounce back - emotionally - because I have gotten to know my process between my thoughts, emotions, and behavior. I recognize when my thoughts and emotions begin to have a back-and-forth that sets in heaviness or doubt. I have found so many answers while being (not fighting to change it) with the discomfort of sadness, fear, and even guilt. With any aspect of our lives--pleasure, pain, a relationship, work--each moment we have some power available to us. We can accept that our world is constantly changing or we can attach ourselves to a (mistaken) notion of control. When we see what we cannot control, we realize what we can control: how we respond to life.These women eloquently describe the combined beauty, strength, and grace of what can live on the other side of hardship. Resilience is evidence of the internal reset button-not a rewind, but a reset. The willingness to move through the world in one's current, altered form. What have you learned about your own capacity for resilience? -- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website. ![]() More... |