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Growth After Disaster: Going Beyond Resilience

flooding-brisbane-Elspeth-and-Evan-flickr-cc

flooding in Brisbane, by Elspeth-and-Evan: Flickr CCIt seems whenever we turn on the TV these days we witness disastrous scenes of flooding, fires, and typhoons forcing people from their homes and leaving businesses devastated.

Yet, studying the trauma left in the wake of these disasters has provided researchers a way to discover how positive responses can also bloom in the aftermath of trauma.

In the new field of positive psychology, it’s not enough to study how happiness flourishes when things are good. Researchers have developed a principle called “falling up” which refers to how some people — individuals with high optimism and success — manage to gain growth not despite a trauma, but because of it.

To see what I mean, try the following brief positive psychology experiment.

On a sheet of paper, quickly jot down three of the greatest moments of GROWTH in your life. Do it right now — before reading ahead.

When I do this simple exercise at companies, close to 90% of responses are connected to some highly stressful period of change. Many people cite going to college, studying abroad, playing in the finals, quitting a job to find a better one, the birth of a child, even depression. I’ve never had someone respond that a vacation was one of their greatest moments of growth.

Stress and Change are the Engines of Human Growth

In fact, think about it: name a single biography worth reading that does not involve an extremely stressful challenge or failure on the part of the protagonist. That is because stress and change are the engines of human growth.

Yet we often find ourselves unable to fall asleep at night thinking of all the stressful things that could happen to us: hurricanes, flooding, stock crashes, losing our job, failure at work, problems in our relationships, sickness.

Research, as well as experience, shows us that some people definitely experience negative effects from traumatic situations (PTSD). Other people are resilient, grieving at first, but then bouncing back to their original level of functioning. As a researcher, I’m not interested in those. I’m really interested in studying those “positive outliers” who are affected by trauma, but who turn it into long-term personal growth.

First, and this is extremely important, positive psychology never argues that trauma itself is good. Tragedies like 9/11 and the earthquake-tsunami in Japan are exactly that:  tragedies. The loss of human life is unfathomable. Some authors mistakenly assume that looking for growth in the midst of challenge ignores the human suffering, which is why they rail against positive psychology. I’ve even seen therapists and spiritual leaders confuse post-traumatic growth with assuming that the trauma itself is good. A car accident, breast cancer, a flood, getting fired — these are traumatic and by definition should be avoided. But the catastropheflooding-Iowa-USGeological-Survey is not the end of the story. Once a trauma has occurred, positive psychology prompts people to ask, “What now?”

Google “post-traumatic growth” and you will find a wealth of research on individuals who experienced growth after the worst traumas you can imagine: heart attack, breast cancer, military combat, refugee displacement. What fascinates me and other researchers is why, after a heart attack, some people become altruistic and get their priorities in line, or how the loss of a job leads to a shifting of career choice to one which aligns better with that person’s strengths, or why someone can walk away from a car accident with a new lease on life, or how someone with cancer can help deepen social support networks for survivors.

3 Things You Can Do in the Wake of Personal Trauma

Research has illuminated differences between people who experience growth after trauma and those who do not. First, these individuals continue to believe that their behavior still matters, which is one of the components of optimism. If you have experienced a trauma, find one concrete action — something you know you can do — to decrease the negative feelings associated with the trauma. For example, if you had a heart attack, decide to give up desserts on Sundays. This gives your brain a “win,” allowing it to keep moving forward.

Second, post-traumatic growth blooms best in a soil of deep social support. If you experience a trauma, try to actively seek the support of your social network — rather than passively waiting for that network to approach you in the midst of hardship. Everyone has their own timetable for recovery, but post-traumatic growth can begin to occur at any point in the grieving process — whether it be one day or ten years later. Social support speeds the process of recovery.

Third, change the way you describe the trauma to yourself. For example, when I was at Harvard Divinity School, I went through two years of depression. At the time, it was terrible. And I could leave the story there. But that misses out on the reality that post-traumatic growth occurred. Because of that depression (not despite it), I began to understand what gets in the way of us creating positive change in our lives, and that jumpstarted my interest in positive psychology and my desire to help people change their mindsets and habits. If it were not for depression, I would not have the understanding, nor the compassion, to help people like I can today. Learning to tell myself that story — rather than the pessimistic version of what happened — has been key to my growth.The Happiness Advantage book cover

Trauma is always bad — but it’s also the beginning of the story, not the end. In the midst of tragedy, we must mourn, but also maintain a belief that our behavior still matters and that growth in life is still possible.

________________________________

Shawn Achor is the founder of Good Think, Inc. and the author of The Happiness Advantage: The 7 Principles of Positive Psychology That Fuel Success and Performance at Work. In 2006, he was Head Teaching Fellow for “Positive Psychology,” the most popular course at Harvard at the time. He holds a Masters from Harvard Divinity School and has spoken in 45 countries to a wide variety of audiences, including bankers on Wall Street, students in Dubai, and CEOs in Zimbabwe.

Growth After Disaster: Going Beyond Resilience

flooding-brisbane-Elspeth-and-Evan-flickr-cc

flooding in Brisbane, by Elspeth-and-Evan: Flickr CCIt seems whenever we turn on the TV these days we witness disastrous scenes of flooding, fires, and typhoons forcing people from their homes and leaving businesses devastated.

Yet, studying the trauma left in the wake of these disasters has provided researchers a way to discover how positive responses can also bloom in the aftermath of trauma.

In the new field of positive psychology, it’s not enough to study how happiness flourishes when things are good. Researchers have developed a principle called “falling up” which refers to how some people — individuals with high optimism and success — manage to gain growth not despite a trauma, but because of it.

To see what I mean, try the following brief positive psychology experiment.

On a sheet of paper, quickly jot down three of the greatest moments of GROWTH in your life. Do it right now — before reading ahead.

When I do this simple exercise at companies, close to 90% of responses are connected to some highly stressful period of change. Many people cite going to college, studying abroad, playing in the finals, quitting a job to find a better one, the birth of a child, even depression. I’ve never had someone respond that a vacation was one of their greatest moments of growth.

Stress and Change are the Engines of Human Growth

In fact, think about it: name a single biography worth reading that does not involve an extremely stressful challenge or failure on the part of the protagonist. That is because stress and change are the engines of human growth.

Yet we often find ourselves unable to fall asleep at night thinking of all the stressful things that could happen to us: hurricanes, flooding, stock crashes, losing our job, failure at work, problems in our relationships, sickness.

Research, as well as experience, shows us that some people definitely experience negative effects from traumatic situations (PTSD). Other people are resilient, grieving at first, but then bouncing back to their original level of functioning. As a researcher, I’m not interested in those. I’m really interested in studying those “positive outliers” who are affected by trauma, but who turn it into long-term personal growth.

First, and this is extremely important, positive psychology never argues that trauma itself is good. Tragedies like 9/11 and the earthquake-tsunami in Japan are exactly that:  tragedies. The loss of human life is unfathomable. Some authors mistakenly assume that looking for growth in the midst of challenge ignores the human suffering, which is why they rail against positive psychology. I’ve even seen therapists and spiritual leaders confuse post-traumatic growth with assuming that the trauma itself is good. A car accident, breast cancer, a flood, getting fired — these are traumatic and by definition should be avoided. But the catastropheflooding-Iowa-USGeological-Survey is not the end of the story. Once a trauma has occurred, positive psychology prompts people to ask, “What now?”

Google “post-traumatic growth” and you will find a wealth of research on individuals who experienced growth after the worst traumas you can imagine: heart attack, breast cancer, military combat, refugee displacement. What fascinates me and other researchers is why, after a heart attack, some people become altruistic and get their priorities in line, or how the loss of a job leads to a shifting of career choice to one which aligns better with that person’s strengths, or why someone can walk away from a car accident with a new lease on life, or how someone with cancer can help deepen social support networks for survivors.

3 Things You Can Do in the Wake of Personal Trauma

Research has illuminated differences between people who experience growth after trauma and those who do not. First, these individuals continue to believe that their behavior still matters, which is one of the components of optimism. If you have experienced a trauma, find one concrete action — something you know you can do — to decrease the negative feelings associated with the trauma. For example, if you had a heart attack, decide to give up desserts on Sundays. This gives your brain a “win,” allowing it to keep moving forward.

Second, post-traumatic growth blooms best in a soil of deep social support. If you experience a trauma, try to actively seek the support of your social network — rather than passively waiting for that network to approach you in the midst of hardship. Everyone has their own timetable for recovery, but post-traumatic growth can begin to occur at any point in the grieving process — whether it be one day or ten years later. Social support speeds the process of recovery.

Third, change the way you describe the trauma to yourself. For example, when I was at Harvard Divinity School, I went through two years of depression. At the time, it was terrible. And I could leave the story there. But that misses out on the reality that post-traumatic growth occurred. Because of that depression (not despite it), I began to understand what gets in the way of us creating positive change in our lives, and that jumpstarted my interest in positive psychology and my desire to help people change their mindsets and habits. If it were not for depression, I would not have the understanding, nor the compassion, to help people like I can today. Learning to tell myself that story — rather than the pessimistic version of what happened — has been key to my growth.The Happiness Advantage book cover

Trauma is always bad — but it’s also the beginning of the story, not the end. In the midst of tragedy, we must mourn, but also maintain a belief that our behavior still matters and that growth in life is still possible.

________________________________

Shawn Achor is the founder of Good Think, Inc. and the author of The Happiness Advantage: The 7 Principles of Positive Psychology That Fuel Success and Performance at Work. In 2006, he was Head Teaching Fellow for “Positive Psychology,” the most popular course at Harvard at the time. He holds a Masters from Harvard Divinity School and has spoken in 45 countries to a wide variety of audiences, including bankers on Wall Street, students in Dubai, and CEOs in Zimbabwe.

Tony Robbins: How Can the Anniversary of 9/11 be Used to Change Your Life?

Tony Robbins on 9/11

How do we react to a crisis? Do we let life destroy us, or can we find a way to turn even the most devastating circumstances into something that can somehow serve the greater good for the long term?

Tony Robbins awoke the day of 9/11 about to conduct a training session in Hawaii for 2,000 people from 39 countries, teaching Emotional Mastery.

He quickly learned that more than 50 people participants, had already discovered they had lost family members, friends and loved ones, as well as a few who lost their entire business at the top of the World Trade Center that morning.

Instead of canceling the day’s session, he decided to bring together this diverse audience — people from different religions and cultures — and get them to redirect their focus to somehow serve a greater good.

RELATED: Bank That Lost 66 Workers on 9/11 Has Paid for All Their Kids to Go to College

Tony’s seminar, which included personal interactions with a Muslim who stood up and told the group about his frustrations, and a Jew who did the same, ended up transforming them both. They discovered they shared the same love and the same pain.

The young Muslim man, Assad, later wrote a book called, My Jihad: A Muslim Man’s Journey From Hate to Love. He and the Jewish man, Bernie, also created a discussion group on religious tolerance.

Inspiring 9/11 Story: A Massai Warrior’s Unexpected Gift to America

Over the past ten years, the Tony Robbins video of that training session has been used around the world as leadership training—from youth leaders in the Middle East to diverse organizations in all parts of the world—dedicated to bringing about positive global change.

“I really believe the best way to honor those whose lives were lost is to continue to embrace life fully, without fear, and to use the greatest of our human resources—our compassion and our drive to serve—to make a difference,” writes Robbins.

WATCH: Tony Robbins Rescues 100-Yr-old Lady Before She Becomes Homeless

“If each of us can find a way to be a source of strength in the middle of pain; if we can bring love where there is hate; and if we can be a force for good in a world of uncertainty then we’ll have done our part to continue the legacy of so many courageous souls who lost their lives that day.”

(WATCH the video below, from TonyRobbins.com)

Missing 3-Year old Boy Returned in Middle of Night

Kienan Hebert is home safe after abductor has change of heart

Kienan Hebert is home safe after abductor has change of heartKienan Hebert was returned to his family home at about 3 a.m. last night, nearly five days after the young boy was reported missing.

The B.C. boy’s safe return comes a day after his father made an emotional plea to whoever had his child.

“We’re just asking please bring Kienan to a safe place right now, like a gas station or a store parking lot where he’s visibly seen and just drop him off there,” Paul Hebert said at a news conference Saturday.

“Walk away. We just want him safe.”

No one was at home when the abductor returned the child because his parents were staying with friends.

(READ the story in the National Post)

Thanks to Jan, Gisele, and Brenda for sending the links!

Artists Help Boy, 12, Curate Major Art Show for Bullying Cause

Painting depicts boy art curator "Super Cooper" at 12

Painting depicts boy art curator "Super Cooper" at 12A superfan of all things art in Los Angeles, Cooper Berella, wanted one thing only for his 12th birthday — to be able to curate an art show for his favorite cause.

“Stop It!!” opened Saturday at the Munky King Gallery on Melrose Avenue, featuring works from around 100 contemporary artists on the theme of bullying and cyber-bullying.

The young painter with long, flowing hair has been regularly taunted for being different, and hopes the exhibit will open hearts and minds.

Some of the proceeds from art sales will be donated to 2 of Cooper’s favorite organizations.

(READ the story, w/ many photos, at LA Daily News)

Affection Forged on 9/11 Leads to “Fireman’s Funeral” for Indigent Angel

Josephine Harris in History Channel film

Josephine Harris in History Channel filmA group of New York firefighters have always credited Josephine Harris with saving their lives during the World Trade Center collapse. Nine years later they would return the favor, as a final salute.

A bookkeeper for the Port Authority, Harris was making her way down stairway B from the 73rd floor in the second tower and was near exhaustion at the 15th floor where Ladder Co. 6 firefighters encountered her on their descent. They slowly coaxed her down ten more floors, knowing the building was on the verge of collapse. With sore legs, she finally refused to go on, but the firefighters refused to leave her.

Within minutes, the building did collapsed around them, but in that particular location, between the fourth and first floors, the walls peeled around them “like a banana,”  allowing them to survive.

When, weeks later, Ms. Harris reunited with the firefighters at their Canal Street station, they gave her a jacket embroidered with the words “Guardian Angel”.

In January this year, Josephine died following several years of unemployment, poverty, and bankruptcy. Her body went unclaimed for days in the morgue.

When the story was published in a New York paper, Good Samaritan Peter DeLuca, who runs a funeral home in the East Village, offered to cover the entire cost of a funeral, $13,000, to honor Josephine, because she was  credited with saving the lives of six firefighters from Ladder 6. (The stairway also sheltered 8 other surviving firemen who had gone back into the building to help their “brothers”.)

NYC fireman in History Channel documentaryFire chiefs who heard about DeLuca’s gesture arranged to turn it into a full fire department funeral. “She got an honor guard, the fire truck, the whole thing,” recalled one firefighter. Former mayor Rudy Giuliani also attended.

“The cloth interior of her blue steel coffin was custom-embroidered with the image of a firefighter in full gear, walking hand in hand with an angel,” reported the New York Times. “Her prayer cards will display her smiling face on one side and the words of the Fireman’s Prayer on the other.”

“You cannot say that something that happened to you is a miracle,” Chief Jonas said in another NY Times article about the funeral. “But we had the courage to do what we did, and you can say that if she was not there for us to save her, we probably would not have made it.”

The story of her rescue from the World Trade Center ten years ago was the subject of a History Channel documentary in 2006, “The Miracle of Stairway B.”

Affection Forged on 9/11 Leads to “Fireman’s Funeral” for Indigent Angel

Josephine Harris in History Channel film

Josephine Harris in History Channel film

A group of New York firefighters have always credited Josephine Harris with saving their lives during the World Trade Center collapse. Nine years later they would return the favor, as a final salute.

A bookkeeper for the Port Authority, Harris was making her way down stairway B from the 73rd floor in the second tower and was near exhaustion at the 15th floor where Ladder Co. 6 firefighters encountered her on their descent. They slowly coaxed her down ten more floors, knowing the building was on the verge of collapse. With sore legs, she finally refused to go on, but the firefighters refused to leave her.

Within minutes, the building did collapsed around them, but in that particular location, between the fourth and first floors, the walls peeled around them “like a banana,”  allowing them to survive.

Teen Hero Given Full Scholarship After Saving Man’s Life in Missile Attack

Israeli teen hero honored by BGU president w/ scholarship

Israeli teen hero honored by BGU president w/ scholarshipA 17 year-old became a model of coolness under fire following an August 20 attack on an Israeli town. Using knowledge gained from a book she’d read when she was 12, she saved the life of a man left for dead by utilizing scraps of material found in the wreckage.

The heroism has won Arina Shestopolov Censor a full college scholarship to Ben-Gurion University.

Hearing cries for help, Censor and her father rushed out of their building to find Nati Hachakur seriously wounded by a missile attack launched from nearby Gaza.

Her father thought Nati had been killed. “I moved on to a second man because I couldn’t find a pulse and his eyes were closed,” he said.

Despite her lack of formal training and in the midst of the havoc, Nati would have bled to death without Arina’s quick thinking when she noticed his eyes opening.

Arina’s only first-aid education came from a book her father had given her to read five years ago about emergency situations.

“The last time I had looked at the book I was 12, but the diagrams just floated into my mind,” she said.

“I found some cloth and a stick and I made a tourniquet. The first two tore, but the third one held,” Arina recalled.

“When Nati was brought in to the ER, we took a picture of Arina’s makeshift tourniquet,” said Dr. Michael Sherf, director-general of Soroka University Medical Center. “I want to use it to teach this generation how to improvize using materials that are at hand.”

“Without their help, Nati would not have made it,” Sherf said.

On September 1, BGU President Prof. Rivka Carmi presented Censor with a certificate of appreciation for her efforts and a full scholarship to BGU.

(READ more from BG University)

Teen Hero Given Full Scholarship After Saving Man’s Life in Missile Attack

Israeli teen hero honored by BGU president w/ scholarship

Israeli teen hero honored by BGU president w/ scholarshipA 17 year-old became a model of coolness under fire following an August 20 attack on an Israeli town. Using knowledge gained from a book she’d read when she was 12, she saved the life of a man left for dead by utilizing scraps of material found in the wreckage.

The heroism has won Arina Shestopolov Censor a full college scholarship to Ben-Gurion University.

Army Major Helps Afghan Boy, 6, Whose Bladder Was Outside His Body

Army Major greets Afgan boy he saved from life of shame -NJ.com Viceo

Army Major greets Afgan boy he saved from life of shame -NJ.com ViceoA 6-year-old Afghan boy born with his bladder outside his body has been reunited with the U.S. soldier who arranged for his rare operation in a New Jersey hospital.

Army Maj. Glenn Battschinger of Mays Landing, N.J., was on foot patrol in Jalalabad, Afghanistan, in April 2010 when he came across Muslam Hagigshah, a frail child who had to constantly hold his leaking bladder in his hand.

Army Major Helps Afghan Boy, 6, Whose Bladder Was Outside His Body

Army Major greets Afgan boy he saved from life of shame -NJ.com Viceo

Army Major greets Afgan boy he saved from life of shame -NJ.com ViceoA 6-year-old Afghan boy born with his bladder outside his body has been reunited with the U.S. soldier who arranged for his rare operation in a New Jersey hospital.

Army Maj. Glenn Battschinger of Mays Landing, N.J., was on foot patrol in Jalalabad, Afghanistan, in April 2010 when he came across Muslam Hagigshah, a frail child who had to constantly hold his leaking bladder in his hand.

What Followed 9/11? Random Acts of Kindness And a Wave of Compassion

I remember the compassion that sprung up on 9/11 and in the weeks following.

In those days, I was regularly printing a newsletter, “Some Good News!”

There were so many inspiring stories in the days following September 11, 2001 that I produced a tribute edition to pay homage to all the amazing acts of kindness that had blossomed around the globe…

The stories of a Las Vegas coach service, the Maine restaurant owners and their special donation, German soldiers saluting from a ship at sea, and the amazing story of Gander, the tiny Newfoundland town that welcomed thousands of stranded airline passengers with open arms: All these little stories will make you remember that special feeling of oneness.

You can download (or print) the 8-page edition of “Some Good News” (Fall, 2001) at the following link: 9/11 Commemorative Newsletter.

What Followed 9/11? Random Acts of Kindness And a Wave of Compassion

some-good-newsRemember the compassion that sprung up on 9/11?

In those days, I regularly printed a newsletter, “Some Good News!” 

There were so many inspiring stories in the weeks following September 11, that I produced a tribute edition to pay homage to all the amazing acts of kindness that had blossomed around the globe…

The stories of a Las Vegas coach service, the Maine restaurant owners and their special donation, German soldiers saluting from a ship at sea, and the amazing story of Gander, the tiny Newfoundland town that welcomed thousands of stranded airline passengers with open arms: All these little stories will make you remember that special feeling of oneness.

You can download (or print) the 8-page edition of “Some Good News” (Fall, 2001) at the following link:

9/11 Commemorative Newsletter (Note: PDF download begins automatically)

California Educator Is Glad to Make Sacrifice (OpEd)

heroes billboard

heroes billboardIn my line of work, I’ve met individuals who are worth hundreds of millions of dollars. And yet the richest man I know is an educator and public servant.

Larry Powell climbed the educational ladder from teacher to principal to Fresno County schools superintendent.

Now, thanks to a heroic and heartwarming gesture, the 63-year-old educator has become a national celebrity, returning $288,241 in salary and benefits for the remaining 3½ years of his contract. He then retired — for one day — and then came back to work for about $31,000 a year with no benefits.

Apartment Dwellers Can Buy a Panel on New Solar Farm

Solar farm - Photo by Convergence Energy, Wisconsin

Convergence Energy Solar Farm in WisconsinA Wisconsin energy company is building one of the largest solar projects in the state, and the first that allows individuals who don’t have sunny exposures on their rooftops to buy a stake in the project.

The Convergence Energy Solar Farm in Lake Geneva began construction last year on 14 acres with the idea of providing a green-power investment opportunity for people who live in a condo or have too much shade to make solar power workable.

Ex-Terrorist Bomber is Now Comic Book Hero and Friend to Police

Captain Jihad comic book image

Captain Jihad comic book imageHoping to persuade children not to make the same mistake he made, a reformed al-Qaida-linked terrorist has become a comic book sensation in a series that chronicles his transformation from villain to invaluable ally in the fight against terrorism.

The story of the soft-spoken 42-year-old ex-militant is well known in Indonesia, the world’s most populous Muslim country.

New Obama Jobs Plan Will Add 1.9M Jobs, Republican Leaders Receptive

obama presents jobs speech to Congress

obama presents jobs speech to CongressUnveiled last night in a speech before Congress, The American Jobs Act, if enacted, could “deliver exactly the kind of swift, sharp jolt the U.S. economy needs,” according to top economists.

Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody’s Analytics, said Obama’s $447 billion plan would likely cut the unemployment rate by a percentage point, adding 1.9 million jobs and growing the economy by 2 percent.

House Republican leaders were positive in their statements following the speech, Speaker Boehner concluding the plan “merits consideration.” Eric Cantor told reporters, “I do think there are policy areas we can agree on,” and called for passage of those parts right away.

One Dog’s Incredible 200-km Mountainous Journey Home

Herder dog adopts mountain hikers, familyphoto

Herder dog adopts mountain hikers, familyphotoAlong a family’s two-month horse-packing journey, a Caucasian sheep dog wondered up and adopted them as his flock, traveling with them for more than 200 kilometres, crossing 11 high mountain passes.

“Rocky had defended us, day and night, against other dogs, drunk passersby and shadows in the night. She trotted happily ahead of us on the trail, and slept nestled among us during breaks. I am certain she would have died before allowing harm come to any one of us.”

Hero Who Predicted 9/11 and Saved 2,700 Lives, Now Subject of New Opera

Rick Rescorla, 9/11 security hero inspires new award

Rick Rescorla was 911 security heroA new Opera called “Heart of a Soldier” brings to life the drama of Rick Rescorla’s heroic rescue of his co-workers at the World Trade Center on Sept. 11, 2001.

Of the almost 2,700 Morgan Stanley employees, only four perished that day, thanks to the instincts of this war veteran and hero who had predicted an attack from the air.

Hero Who Predicted 9/11 and Saved 2,700 Lives, Now Subject of New Opera

Rick Rescorla, 9/11 security hero inspires new award

Rick Rescorla was 911 security heroA new Opera called “Heart of a Soldier” brings to life the drama of Rick Rescorla’s heroic rescue of his co-workers at the World Trade Center on Sept. 11, 2001.

Of the almost 2,700 Morgan Stanley employees, only four perished that day, thanks to the instincts of this war veteran and hero who had predicted an attack from the air.