Resilience

[vc_row padding_setting=”1″ desktop_padding=”padding-one”][vc_column width=”1/1″][vc_column_text]By Anne Peters, LMFT

If the last year has taught us anything (and boy, it’s taught us a lot), it’s taught us that humans are resilient. That does not mean we are free of fear or pain or struggle, but that we can make it through. The Webster Dictionary definition of resilience states, “an ability to recover from or adjust easily to misfortune or change.” If we were to sit down and list all the misfortunes or change we have encountered during the last year, how many do you think we would come up with? We saw changes to schooling, community events, our own health, our relationships with others, our careers, our finances, and the list could go on. But yet, here we are. We are recovering from misfortune. We are recovering from change. We are resilient.

If you’re like me, you don’t always feel a strong sense of resilience. Sometimes, it all feels like too much and we may think, “When will it end?” Perhaps this is the perfect time for us to reframe the way we see ourselves. Instead of seeing ourselves as stressed, down, and exhausted following a year of a worldwide pandemic, we can see ourselves as tenacious, patient, and resilient.

Dr. Ginsburg explains there are seven components to being resilient. These include competence, confidence, connection, character, contribution, coping, and control. I encourage you to reflect on these seven components and identify a time you feel you excelled in each area. When did you demonstrate competence? When was a time you were confident? And so on. It feels good to recognize our own strengths and see what helps make us so resilient.

Here’s a final activity that would be great to do with the whole family – kids and adults! Spend some time reflecting on the challenges you’ve encountered, and discuss what helped you get through them. It can be a big challenge like the COVID-19 pandemic, or a day-to-day challenge. Help each other to identify the strengths that were shown during these challenges and jot them down. Then put all of these strengths together on a piece of paper and post it somewhere the whole family can see. It’s a reminder of just how many strengths the family has, and just how resilient you all are.[/vc_column_text][/vc_column][/vc_row]

The Art of Journaling: 10 Journal Prompts to Get You Started

[vc_row padding_setting=”1″ desktop_padding=”padding-one”][vc_column width=”1/1″][vc_column_text]By Anne Peters, LMFT

Journaling. It’s a tried-and-true way to increase your self-understanding and to manage your feelings. Can’t quite decide which option is best for you? Feeling overwhelmed, frustrated, or down? Working through a conflict with a loved one? Setting new goals for yourself? Proud of what you have accomplished? The list goes on and on.

Journaling can be used at any point, no matter what stage of life you’re going through. Some people are natural-born writers and some people (myself included) need a little boost to know what direction to go in. There are so many amazing guided journals on the market right now. Bullet journaling is one of my favorites! Even without a guided journal, just do a quick Google search on journaling prompts and it will produce thousands of ideas. Here are 10 journaling prompts that I love to get you started. Happy journaling!

1. If I could talk to my teenage self, I would say…
2. Make a list of 30 things that make you smile.
3. Make a list of everything you’d like to say “no” to.
4. Make a list of everything you’d like to say “yes” to.
5. Write the words you need to hear.
6. If you could only accomplish three things today, what would be the most important items on your to-do list?
7. Write a letter to someone you really admire. It could be a public figure or someone you know. What do you admire about them? How have they inspired you?
8. Write a letter to yourself in five years.
9. Write about a moment in your life when you felt most proud of yourself.
10. Write about a time you overcame a challenge.[/vc_column_text][/vc_column][/vc_row]