Barking Up The Wrong Tree August 2nd, 2022 ---------------------------------------------------------------
Before we commence with the festivities, I wanted to thank everyone for helping my new book become a bestseller! To check it out, click [here](. --------------------------------------------------------------- How To Be Resilient: 5 Secrets To Success When Life Gets Impossible ([Click here]( to read on the blog) Youâre dropped off in the middle of a forest with nothing but the clothes on your back. Youâre going to need to live off the land to survive. (Hope you paid attention during all those Bear Grylls episodes.) Oh, and youâre being hunted. Dangerous people are trying to capture you. You know: your average Sunday. And even if you do manage to survive this, the next phase is even worse. Youâre caught, blindfolded, and locked in a cell. Music blasts 24-7 to disorient you. Youâre deprived of sleep. Repeatedly interrogated. And they tell you all this stress can end if you just give up and tell them what you know... No, this isnât âreal.â Itâs what soldiers going through the SERE (Survival, Evasion, Resistance, and Escape) training program deal with. It simulates what you might deal with when caught behind enemy lines. So how would you do in this scenario? Yeah, youâd freak out and pee-pee yourself. (If you listen closely, you can hear me calling for my mom.) You and I arenât alone; the vast majority of soldiers fail. 96% experienced âdissociative symptomsâ â they were so stressed their minds fled reality. The military realized this program was fine at vetting for the elite, but was horrible at teaching your average soldier anything. And so the military changed their protocols. They consulted researchers about mental strength and resilience. And they learned that many of our ideas about toughness were wrong... You and I deal with stressful situations too. (Okay, nobody simulates torturing you but it often feels like it.) Giving up at the first sign of difficulty doesnât look good on anyoneâs resume. So what can we learn from the new science of resilience? Steve Magness combed the research on toughness for his spirited new book, â[Do Hard Things: Why We Get Resilience Wrong and the Surprising Science of Real Toughness]( Itâs a Dungeon Masterâs guide to hanging in there when we feel overwhelmed. And it has the answers we need. Letâs get to it... Embrace Reality When times get hard, we feel we should just dismiss any doubts. Fill ourselves with bravado to push through. But this is rarely the smart choice. When difficulties turn out to be extreme, youâre left like Wile E. Coyote glancing down to realize there isnât anything beneath your feet â and youâre holding an anvil. Studies done on military survival school participants found a consistent pattern in those who succeeded â they were realistic about the situation. An accurate appraisal of what they faced combined with an accurate appraisal of their abilities was key. Ouch. That level of remorseless clarity feels like it will give you cancer of the enthusiasm. But without a clear vision of what youâre facing you canât make good decisions. So how do you do this the right way? First, set appropriate goals. Weâre often told to dream big but that can lead to crushing disappointment. You want to set goals that are just beyond your reach. A stretch -- but do-able. Break the problem into smaller, more realistic steps and slowly increase the difficulty. This allows for progress without the potential for breaking your spirit. The second pattern researchers noted was people who persisted saw difficulties as challenges, not threats. A challenge is difficult but manageable. Like a game. Perceiving obstacles as threats narrows your focus too much. You concentrate on mere survival and performance tanks. (To learn about how to improve your relationships, check out my new bestselling book [here]( But your current âchallengeâ might feel more like a threat. âI canât do itâ might be tattooed on your consciousness. Youâre looking at things realistically â and itâs killing your confidence. How do we handle that? Boost Confidence So your confidence levels are a disaster, to the point where they may be eligible for federal funding. Should you âfake it till you make itâ? A study of over twelve thousand subjects found faking it beats doing nothing â but it performed miserably compared to real confidence. Faking it only helps on easy tasks when you just need a bit more motivation to get going. So how do you feel positive so you can get to work? Actually, itâs the reverse: you act and then you feel positive. Confidence comes from accomplishment, not from telling yourself youâre awesome. Confidence is when meeting goals revises your internal narrative. To increase confidence while under the gun, pave the way to the progress that produces confidence. First, make an accurate, vulnerable assessment of yourself. When weaknesses are acknowledged you can do something about them. Next, focus on your average performance, not your best. Benchmarking against your best days leads to disappointment. When you know what problems you need to solve and what you can realistically expect, you can better prepare, shift your strategy or ask for help. Admittedly, this is far from a magic bullet. Negative feelings mount and you no longer feel grounded. Youâre emotionally caught in an M.C. Escher picture and the stairs always go in a circle... How do you get your head straight so you can move forward? Find Control When you donât feel you have control over a situation, motivation goes into an apocalyptic tailspin. Itâs a quick slide down apathy road to the cul-de-sac of âWhy bother?â Meanwhile, a feeling of control offers powerful relief. Had-to-pee-for-a-half-hour-and-finally-found-a-bathroom relief. Neuroscience research has found that feeling control kicks your prefrontal cortex into gear â your âthinky brain.â It dampens emotions and starts the problem-solving engine going. So how do we get that feeling of control? Start small. Can I slow my breathing down? Something that small can steady you enough to take the next step. But maybe you still think you donât have control. Thatâs okay. This isnât about whether you objectively have the resources to handle the situation; itâs an issue of how you feel. And when you feel you have a choice, you feel you have control. Steve gives an example that sounds crazy â but makes sense. He was coaching a runner who would always get so worried before a race that she would vomit. Sure enough, before the next big meet she said, âIâm going to puke.â âGreat! When do you want to do it?â What?! âWeâll schedule it. When do you want to puke?â Ummm⦠9:45? âGood, Iâll set an alarm.â The time came to vomit and⦠she didnât need to. It was the first time this ever happened. She was still nervous, but sheâd gained a sense of control over it. It was her decision now. Her choice. And she ended up running her best time of the year. When we build choice into the system, we get a feeling of control. This is the same reason diets often include a cheat day. No, thereâs not a physiological benefit to them. Your metabolism is not so easily tricked. But by making isolated failure a part of the system, it stops being failure. It becomes a choice, and you donât give up. So create a ritual for yourself. Athletes often have crazy rituals â like wearing the same color socks on game day. Yes, itâs superstitious but itâs not crazy. Rituals give you an early feeling of control, even if itâs illusory. This allows you to confidently get started. And then once you make progress, the control and confidence become real. Alright, youâve got tools to be more confident. But when the pressure is on, your brain can feel woven from crooked branches of pessimism. The emotions keep coming... But thatâs a good thing -- if you know the right way to deal with them... Respond Instead Of React Old school toughness says feelings should be ignored. But the research shows this is so ineffective you might mistake it for homeopathy. Truly tough people like top athletes donât do this. They know ignoring emotions means losing valuable information. âInteroceptionâ is awareness of how your body is feeling. A study of stock traders showed those who had better interoception made more money. It wasnât better credentials that predicted who was profitable; it was who could listen to their body. But the bigger problem with feelings is they can convince us that we have to obey them. When things get hard and negativity escalates, your brain starts dishing out hot nonsense on a scale that is nothing less than mythic. Itâs like a haunted house but the ghosts are in your head. How do you strike a balance between listening to your body and not listening? Remember that emotions are messengers, not dictators. This prevents your brain from seeming like a good friend who is trying to kill you. Your feelings are employees offering you options, not the CEO giving you orders. Yeah, easier said than done. Whatâs the secret to making it work? Create space. No, you donât need to move furniture. Accept whatever emotions come in. When you wrestle with feelings your brain says, âThis must be important.â It turns into a âDonât think about white bearsâ problem. By accepting feelings, you donât amplify them. Next, label the emotions. This mystically transforms feelings into thoughts. And once youâre thinking, your thinky brain takes the wheel. Donât say, âIâm tired.â Say, âIâm experiencing tiredness.â It doesnât define you. Itâs just information you can use to make a better decision. Instead of amorphous feelings warping your mind, you have suggestions coming from your body. And then you can have a calm internal conversation with them over tea and biscuits: âIâm experiencing tiredness.â Noted. But weâre on mile twenty of a marathon right now so weâre supposed to be tired. Thanks for the tip, Brain, but we need to keep running. This takes us a long way toward where we wanna be. Problem is, if the threat challenge is substantial enough, your mind hauls out its biggest weapon: âGOOD GOD, WHATâS THE POINT?â And that will kick a hole in your soul. But this leads us to the most powerful motivator of them all... Transcend Discomfort When you look at all the studies on persistence, something comes up again and again. The people who perform best arenât motivated by fear, money, image, or anything external. The royals of resilience are those driven by something internal. Purpose. Meaning. But how does meaning reduce the pain of serious stress? It doesnât. One time I needed to have a root canal and I asked the dentist for nitrous. I told him I didnât want to feel the pain. He corrected me with what might seem like a minor distinction: âWith nitrous, youâll still feel the pain. You just wonât care.â And thatâs what meaning does. Being a parent is stressful as all get out. It can feel like an endless parade of difficulty. But you persist because you know that taking care of your kid is more important. Some feelings are powerful and motivating. (Looking at you, Confidence.) But some feelings are hard to come by and fleeting. (Still looking at you, Confidence.) But deep meaning says, âIt doesnât matter how I feel right now â Iâve got bigger fish to fry.â And you keep going. So think about why youâre doing what youâre doing. Why is this important at the big picture oh-my-god-this-is-my-one-life level? And if you donât have a good answer to that, you can find deep purpose someplace else. No, you donât have to join a creepy, disturbing cult like Satanism or CrossFit. Look to the people you care about... In 2010, the awesome Dacher Keltner studied over 300 playersâ behavior during games of the 2008-2009 NBA season. He found that the number of high-fives and chest bumps predicted team cooperation and better performance. So you need more high-fives? No, you do not need more high-fives. Itâs what they represented. They were signs the players cared about one another. They were in it together. And they not only persisted, they won. There are stressful times when you donât feel like youâre âin it together through thick and thin.â It can feel like youâre âin it together through thin and thinner.â But when we feel support from others, we stay in it. Together. Alrighty, time to round it all up and learn the real value we get from resilience over the long haul... Sum Up Here are the secrets of toughness:
- Embrace Reality: It can be harsh, but youâre not going to make better driving decisions by blocking the windshield. Set appropriate goals and donât see threats, see challenges.
- Boost Confidence: We donât feel confident and act, we act and feel confident. Be honest about your weaknesses so you can compensate for them. Focus on your average performance to make progress without disappointment.
- Find Control: Without a feeling of control, we lose motivation. Realize you always have a choice. Create a starting ritual.
- Respond Instead of React: Donât ignore your feelings. Accept and label emotions. See feelings as information, not dictators.
- Transcend Discomfort: In the end, the only motivation that matters comes from meaning. A greater purpose or the support of others. Gimme a high-five, willya?
The old version of toughness doesnât work. Iâm not saying recent science has euthanized that concept. No, no, the research has, um, moved old school toughness to a big farm! Yeah, where it can run and play with all the other outdated concepts. Itâs very happy there. We got you a new version of toughness right here, darling... Real toughness is being realistic, finding control inside yourself, accepting feelings as information, and having a sense of meaning that keeps you going. No, this isnât going to be a mental luau. Yes, there will be struggle. I know, more struggle doesnât sound fun. You may already be tenured in struggle. But you donât want to just quit. On the mental purchase page for âquittingâ it says: Amazon shoppers who purchased quitting also purchased regret, sadness, and lack of fulfillment. Look, Iâm not one to judge⦠out loud. But Iâd argue if youâre not doing enough things that occasionally make you want to quit, youâre not doing enough important things. In the end, itâs not about the challenges or accomplishments. Itâs about how all those little choices shape the person you are. Your character. Becoming the kind of person who is resilient in the face of stress. So donât give up... Just schedule the vomiting for 9:45. ***If you are one of those lovely people who bought "Plays Well With Others" please leave a review on Amazon [here](. Thanks!*** Email Extras Findings from around the internet... + Want to know the best way to brag make your strengths known? Click [here](. + Want to know the perspective that helps you learn? Click [here](. + Want to know if coffee is bad for you? Click [here](. + Miss my prior post? Here you go: [New Neuroscience Reveals 5 Secrets That Will Make You Lose Weight](. + Want to know the upside of quitting your job? Click [here](. (Many thanks to the excellent [Dan Pink]( + You read to the end of the email. See? You're already more resilient. Okay, it's Crackerjack Time: I had a great conversation about overcoming loneliness with Rainn Wilson (Yes, Dwight Schrute from "The Office.") You can check it out [here](.
Thanks for reading!
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