Resilience: On Bouncing Back From Adversity
I read an article
recently about dealing with, or leaning into, discomfort. It basically makes the point that we need to
keep the art of resilience alive, both by being resilient ourselves and by
teaching it to our kids. Since reading this, I have come across further
articles
about how we’re raising kids that are not as emotionally strong or industrious
as past generations, and about
obsessing over our kids being happy can cause problems for them in adult
life...
Well. This is a hot
button for me.
And I am not a parent and I am going to talk about kids,
which may be a hot button for you.
Let’s lean into the discomfort of that, shall we?
Back in the old days, people knew all about adversity. Even kids knew about not making the team and
relatives and pets dying and not getting what they wanted for Christmas and
birthdays because their parents couldn’t afford it. They knew for a fact that life was unfair
sometimes and so they developed coping mechanisms. Some said, maybe next time, or you win some,
you lose some, or the cloud has a silver lining, or God works in mysterious
ways. They grew up with disappointment,
and they had to grow thicker skins so that it didn’t bruise the hell out of
them through life. Some people stayed
bitter to...well...the bitter end, but many folks chose to remain resilient and
bounce back from disappointment.
You can’t sharpen a razor on velvet. You can’t get strong unless you encounter
resistance. If things are too soft,
there’s not enough friction to have an effect.
In order to build resiliency, there has to be some kind of adversity to
bounce back FROM. Bouncing only occurs
when you hit something hard and are flexible enough to ricochet off it. Otherwise, you can’t do it. When trouble hits, you flounder. You don’t know what to do, because you
haven’t the experience that tells you what to do. You only get that experience FROM going
through difficulties and problem-solving your way through them. Remember trial-and-error? First you try a solution, and if you get an
error, then you adapt it or try something new until you find something that
works. You’re using ingenuity, and at
the same time, developing those inventive parts of the brain that will aid you
in future problem-solving, under similar circumstances. You’re also developing confidence in
yourself, in your ability to handle problems on your own, which is the TRUE
source of the self-esteem we all want our kids to have. How can we expect our kids to be able to
stand up and smile proudly and say “I DID IT!” with a fistpump...if they DIDN’T
do it, if WE did it for them? They
can’t.
How can they learn to tie their shoes if we give them shoes
with Velcro? How can they learn to cut
their meat if we never give them whole pieces of steak or chicken, but always
do the cutting for them? How can they
learn how to push through the math problems and figure out HOW to do it if we
do their homework for them? How will
they learn to write essays and papers and get into college, and THROUGH college
(which is chock FULL of essay/paper writing!), if we write their entrance essay
for them when they apply to schools?
How will they ever learn how to budget their money, fill out job
applications properly, complete their driving tests, pay off their monthly
credit card bills at a decent low level so they don’t run themselves into debt,
and so much more, if we don’t teach them how to do it themselves? These things and more are rites of passage
in our culture. Mantles of
responsibility we took on our own shoulders only because we had taken smaller
ones on all of our lives, gradually getting heavier over time, so we could
handle the accumulated weight in increments.
And if we didn’t have the luck of having parents to show us how to
handle these things early on, we had to figure them out for ourselves, either
sinking or swimming. We had responsibility put squarely on our
shoulders. And we learned from it. We had to.
So why are we so squeamish about letting discomfort fall on
our kids’ shoulders? Why are we so
over-protective of them? And what in
Jehosephat’s name are we trying to protect them FROM? Skinned knees? Falling down? Verbal insults? Having to work hard, either mentally or
physically? What makes these things so
unbearable to us to have our kids to deal with? Did you have to go to therapy because you
fell down when you were four and got a cut on your leg? No, you got a scar and a story to tell. Were you emotionally crushed when you had to
cut the lawn every week during the summer, help with the dishes and
laundry? No, you gained both experience
in how to do household chores and a work ethic.
Did you shrink up and die every
time someone called you a name? No, you
grew a thicker skin and learned clever ways to give as good as you got, and
then as you got older, you learned to ignore the stupidity and not take it
personally.
You had to do all of these things. No one could protect you from this. It’s called “life”. We get bumped and knocked around in life,
and learning how to withstand it and sometimes fight back, when it’s called
for, makes us stronger people. To sanitize the world and remove the germs and
bullies and sharp rocks and disappointment of not getting what they want may
create safer kids, but it also creates dependent, neurotic ones who fall apart
when life doesn’t coddle them. No one
wants to see their kids recoil in fear against something they (the parents) can’t
control, but preventing them from ever dealing with disappointment or getting hurt
is not making it better for them—in fact, on the contrary...it hurts them. They
have no confidence, no self-reliance, no resilience, and it’s taking them
longer to grow up...if they ever do.
They grow up feeling like perpetual children, and see themselves as
victims, for that’s what we’re encouraging them to be. And this, my friends, is a grave disservice—not
only to the children, but to the world as well.
How will they function as adults? How will they cope with life’s
speedbumps? Even more importantly, with
its maelstroms like divorce, losing jobs, and death? If you think they can’t handle the family
pet’s death, how are you preparing them for your own eventual departure? If they always make the team without testing
their mettle, how do you think they’re going to handle it when they don’t get
the job they want so desperately? We
need to let our kids lose sometimes, so that they learn how to deal with
loss. They need to develop coping
mechanisms; they can’t do this if they are never up against anything to cope
with. They need to grieve, then they
need to realize they can overcome grief and move on, getting back up on the
horses that threw them. This is how we
encourage them to become resilient adults.
And resilient adults are happier adults, so sayeth the experts,
as well as the grown-ups who are themselves resilient.
Let's remember the greater good, my lovelies. Let's remember the bigger picture. Let them make mistakes and learn from
them. Let them fail so they can understand
what they did right when they earn success.
Let them know that there is always the option of “Plan B” if “Plan A” doesn’t work, and that
they are perfectly capable of figuring it out.
Let them know you expect them to persevere in whatever they do. Let
them lean into discomfort so that they aren’t paralyzed when they feel it.
Comments
Life is hard. Go into the world, my children, and apply what you have learned. You won't get it right every time, but when you do, you'll know it and you'll be proud of yourselves.