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Building Resilience: 3 Science-Backed Ways to Find Healing

Setbacks are not unique to life. What is unique is
how well we are able to bounce-back from those setbacks. This ability to bounce
back—our ability to overcome and grow from life’s challenges—is known as resiliency. Building resilience is a key
to growing and healing from life’s inevitable failures, tragedies, and setbacks.

The Road to Resilience: A Researched Guide

When experiencing tragedy or going through challenges, you
might feel too overwhelmed to even think about building resilience. Thankfully,
resilience doesn’t need to happen all at once—it can start small.

Below are three simple, science-backed approaches to get you
started on building resilience.

Start Where You Are

Group of friends walk down dirtroad path, symbolic of their "road to resilience"

Start building resilience by asking, “What is the story I am telling myself?”
Understanding how you perceive a setback is the first step to knowing how to
move forward from it.

What the Science Says

According to research, the story or narrative we tell ourselves—especially the one we tell about our families—impacts our ability to be resilient. Researchers categorized these narratives in three ways. Below is description and example of each:

  • Ascending NarrativesBottom-Top
    stories of “We had nothing, but we worked hard, and now we’re on top.”
  • Descending Narratives—Top-Bottom stories
    of “We used to be on top, but we lost everything. Now we’re here.”
  • Oscillating Narratives—Balanced stories
    of “I worked hard and got a great job, but then I was laid off. I was depressed
    at first, but then I saw it as an opportunity to rethink my career path. Then I
    got a new job that I love even more.”

The research found that the balanced or “oscillating” story
is the most healthy—and most nuanced—of the narratives.

What You Can Do

Write or record your story. This story can be as expansive
as your family story over several generations, or it could be the story of a
current challenge or setback. Try to identify which narrative you are telling
yourself.

The Record My Story activity will prompt you with questions
you can answer and provide a safe place to store your story.

Reframe the Story

Now that you know where you are—what story you have been
telling yourself—it’s time to put your challenges into perspective. Ask
yourself, “What is the real story?”

Two sisters play with a dog

What the Science Says

The science—as highlighted by this research article—supports two key ways that reframing your story can improve resilience and overall well-being.

  1. Create a balanced narrative: People whose stories included the “sharing of positive moments alongside the ability to bounce back from difficult ones,” showed improved self-esteem and enhanced feelings of control and “mastery over life.” In other words, people who reframed their stories to include the good and the bad were more resilient.
  2. Look at the Big Picture: Those who reframed their stories to include their family story experienced an “expanded sense of self” connected to family across generations. This connection contributes to resilience “at all stages of life.”
Grandmother with granddaughter outside. Reframing your stories to include the stories of your family builds resilience

What You Can Do

Start reframing your story to be more balanced, and include
the stories of those who came before you. 
 Talk to your family about their
stories (we’ll talk about this process more in the next section), and learn
more about your heritage.

(Tip: If you don’t know your heritage, try searching your surname,
which can give you clues about where you came from.)

Connect to Others Through Your Story

Research shows that your social support systems help build resilience. The science also shows that connecting to your family through listening to their stories and sharing your own stories is a significant way to build resilience.

What the Science Says

Two Samoan brothers in the jungle together

A study at Emory University asked children and adolescents 20 basic questions about their family background, such as where their parents went to high school or where their grandparents were from.

The researchers found that the more the participants understood
about their families, the easier it was for them to feel self-confidence and to
experience a healthy level of control over their lives. Knowing their family stories
helped children and teenagers develop a sense of identity as part of something
much bigger.

What You Can Do

Connect your larger family story by asking your relatives about their lives. You can use the questions from the Emory study or use our #52Stories template as a guide.

Be sure to share these stories, whether it be on social
media or in person. By sharing the stories, you help build resilience in
others, especially those in your family. To preserve these stories for future
generations, consider storing them in FamilySearch Memories.

Grandmother and grandchildren walk down path.

Resiliency is understanding your story. It is understanding that you can add another chapter. Start discovering your story today.

Jessica Grimaud and Annelie Hansen contributed to this post.

Source: Family Search

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