We all experience stress in our lives. Traffic, Monthly bills, Health concerns, Relationship issues, Because the mind and body are so closely linked, these constant worries can take a toll on health, contributing to a host of diseases.

While you can’t erase all sources of stress, you can learn how to reduce stress and also build resilience — which is your ability to bounce back from stress.

Healthy-minded; antifragile

William James was a notable Harvard philosopher-psychologist of the late 19th century and a graduate of Harvard Medical School. James was also a stressed-out melancholic. He marveled at people he called “the healthy-minded“— optimistic and positive people who appeared to live hap­pier and healthier lives. Amid the run-of-the-mill volatility everyone must deal with, James observed that the healthy-minded seemed to turn challenges and potential failures into grist for opportunities and successes.

The characteristics that James saw as “healthy-minded” statistician and risk-management specialist Nassim Nicholas Taleb called “antifragile“. In his book Antifragile: Things That Gain from Disorder, Taleb defines fragility as the tendency to be damaged by volatility and uncertainty — the kinds of things that often create a chronic stress response.

By contrast, says Taleb, the antifragile person realizes that stress is just the price we pay for being alive. Cultivating anti­fragility helps us use our strengths to overcome chal­lenges and become stronger in the process.

A prime example of antifragility is the Navy Seals. The Seals are able to manage high degrees of stress and still function admirably. Faced with life-threatening situations, they can rapidly change the focus of their attention and address the issue at hand efficiently and flexibly.

Brain scans show that Seals have altered acti­vation in a prefrontal brain region called the insula, which is involved in managing stress signals. As a group, Navy Seals exhibit at least seven characteris­tics of resilient people:

  • Calm, innovative, nondogmatic thinking
  • The ability to act decisively
  • Tenacity
  • Inter­personal connectedness
  • Honesty
  • Self-control
  • Optimism and a positive perspective on life.

Whether adopting a “healthy-minded” mindset, cultivating antifragility, or thinking like a Navy Seal, building resilience is a powerful tool against stress. People tend to think of resilience as a trait that you either have or don’t have, but it’s actually a capacity that you can develop with the right approach.

Reference: Posted in Harvard Health Publishing (2023), Available at: https://www.health.harvard.edu/staying-healthy/bouncing-back-from-stress (Accessed: 4 July, 2023)