Resilience is a skill that can be cultivated, a psychologist explains

Resilience is not a static quality but rather a set of skills that can be developed over time.

photo of a man rock climbing with mountains pictured in the background
Similar to building up the skills needed to climb a mountain or perform another physical task, resilience can be learned over time, an expert argues.
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The word resilience can be perplexing. Does it mean remaining calm when faced with stress? Bouncing back quickly? Growing from adversity? Is resilience an attitude, a character trait or a skill set? And can misperceptions about resilience hurt people, rather than help?

To sum it up in a sentence: Resilience is the ability to manage stress in effective ways. It's not a static quality or attribute you're born with, or a choice of attitude. Instead, it's a set of skills that can be developed by repeating specific behaviors. As a clinical psychologistresearcher and educator specializing in training people to cope with stress more effectively, I know that resilience can be developed.

I am a clinical psychologist, research scientist, and educator specializing in mindfulness, self-compassion, and traumatic stress. I am affiliated as adjunct faculty at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York, NY and at Seattle University. I am the author of Mindfulness Skills for Trauma and PTSD: Practices for Recovery and Resilience (Norton) and The Self-Talk Workout: Six Science-Backed Strategies to Dissolve Self-Criticism and Transform the Voice in Your Head (Shambhala).