Resilient by Rick Hanson
Resilient by Rick Hanson
Resilient by Rick Hanson
RESILIENCE
MentorBox
ABOUT RICK
These constant changes in the wiring of your brain allow you to have
a powerful influence over your own mind. When you mindfully stay
with and breathe into an experience, your neurons create stronger
pathways that you can return to in the future with greater ease.
For example, as you sit and meditate on the feeling of compassion,
your neurons start to build a stronger pathway back to that feeling,
rewiring your brain toward reexperiencing compassion.
Now that you have a better understanding of how your brain changes
through learning and mindfulness, how can you guide your brain to the
inner resources you want to grow? The HEAL acronym is a useful tool
to use on your journey. It stands for: Have, Enrich, Absorb, and Link.
HAVE
ENRICH
LINK
There are 4 primary inner strengths that will help you to face
challenges and protect your vulnerabilities: compassion, grit,
motivation, and generosity.
COMPASSION
1. Focus on being cared for. Bring to mind the feeling of being cared
for by a person who is on your side. This might be a memory of being
held by a parent after you scraped your knee or the sensation you
had working with a boss who helped you navigate difficult challenges
with care and understanding. Whatever the memory, hold the feeling
in your body and mind for a few breaths to warm up the brain’s
compassion circuitry.
APPLICATION
COMPASSION
This practice will take time because our brains have a negativity bias.
They are hardwired to learn more quickly from negative experiences
than positive ones. You can counteract this imbalance by tilting
toward kindness and compassion for yourself and by mindfully
registering positive experiences.
EXERCISE
GRIT
AGENCY
Deep down, we all know how to harness our grit to fight our way out
of difficult or dangerous situations. This is our natural fierceness. It’s
the part of every person that’s still connected to their wildness and
animal instincts. It’s the quality that kicks in if you get lost in the
woods and need to call upon hidden reserves to find your way back
home. As with all of your inner resources, you can develop greater
access to your natural fierceness by consciously internalizing the
moments when your fierceness emerges. When you are playing soccer
and feel a sudden sense of power and kick the ball all the way down
the field, stay with that feeling of intensity and allow your body and
brain to create a lasting memory of it. As you register these memories
and pay attention to the accompanying feelings, you create stronger
neural pathways and begin to incorporate more fierceness and grit
into your natural state of being.
APPLICATION
MOTIVATION
Motivation pulls you forward along the path toward your goals.
When you need a reason to keep going, motivation is the inner
resource you can call upon to navigate through challenges with
resilience. Effective motivation identifies healthy motivators and
harnesses the brain’s natural hardwiring.
Just as you can learn to want in a healthy way, you can also learn to
want healthier things. To motivate yourself to choose behaviors that are
good for you, even if you don’t naturally want to choose them, imagine
some of the rewards that will come from regularly choosing this better
option. Think of the rewards that will come from regularly exercising,
eating healthy foods, and not drinking too much alcohol. You’ll feel
healthy, fit, and proud for keeping a high standard for yourself.
Authentic generosity feels good, and as you are able to give more
freely and sincerely, more will come back to you. This is true across all
aspects of your life, from relationships to work and beyond. One of
the most important ways to exercise generosity is through forgiveness.
When you forgive others, you give them the space to move on, find
closure and grow. This also creates space for the same experience of
closure within your own life.
FORGIVENESS
In Full Pardon Forgiveness, you fully release the person who has
wronged you from their burden, and totally wipe the slate clean. Full
Pardon Forgiveness is challenging, and is often reserved for closer
relationships or people who have truly earned a fresh start.
The next step in the forgiveness process is to find compassion for the
person who harmed you. This doesn’t mean approving of or agreeing
with their actions. It’s a recognition of the person’s suffering and
a sincere wish that they were not suffering. Compassion for those
who have wronged you makes you less upset about it: it’s a calming,
soothing gift to yourself. When you forgive, you are released from the
weight of the resentment you’ve been carrying around.
What are 4 ways you could be more compassionate in your work life?
1.
2.
3.
4.
What are 4 ways you could be more compassionate in your personal life?
1.
2.
3.
4.
Think of 4 ways you’ve been generous to your friends. How did those
moments of generosity help you in your work or personal life?
Pick 1 inner resource you’d like to cultivate and use the HEAL
acronym to track it over the course of 2 weeks. Take notes of the
experiences you have, how you enrich them, how you absorb them,
and how you link them.
EXERCISE
YOU’VE MADE IT!
CONGRATULATIONS!
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