Posted on December 28th, 2022
Are you mentally tough? When life presents its inevitable challenges do you rise, seeing them as an opportunity to grow? Or do you find yourself ducking under the covers?One pandemic buzzword has been “resilience”, the ability to experience a challenge without being negatively affected. Perhaps even growing through stress. We all know exceptionally resilient people, and you might think some people are born mentally tough.
Yet, research suggests it’s a collection of life circumstances, personal factors, mindset, and social connections that boost resilience. This means you can build more mental toughness, too.
Some hard-core athletes may tell you that mental toughness is the essence of what keeps them from quitting when down to their last miles, reps, or seconds of competition. There’s a lot more to mental fitness than a “do or die” mentality and it’s not only elite athletes or special forces operatives that are mentally tough. People from all walks of life, personality types, and dispositions can build resilience, better handle stress, and grow.
Mental toughness refers to one’s ability to weather challenges or face life’s inevitable stressors without being negatively affected. This includes wanted challenges, like a promotion or certification exams, and unexpected events, like illness or accidents. Resilient people are cool under pressure and able to roll with whatever’s being thrown at them.
Psychological resilience is important for more than keeping your cool. Resilience has been linked to increased longevity, greater well-being, improved mental health, and even satisfaction with your life. Being resilient also makes you available to support others and more readily able to pursue your passions, purpose, and meaningful life.
Our mental toughness can be negatively affected by both psychological and physical factors. Long-term and unmanaged stress wears down both the body and the mind. So do perceptions of overwhelm, when we feel we don’t have the emotional or physical resources to meet whatever demands are on us.
Our lifestyle behaviors can also have a significant effect on toughness. Inadequate or poor sleep has a bidirectional relationship with resilience; meaning those with higher resilience tend to sleep better, and those that sleep better have more resilience. This shows how the brain and body are linked when it comes to being mentally tough.
Similarly, eating poorly or being sedentary can negatively affect resilience, though people tend to sit more and eat more junk food when they’re feeling stressed. Regularly over-training also depletes us mentally and physically.
Mindset has a significant effect on mental toughness. When challenges present themselves, we explain the cause and effect of that stress to ourselves. Those who see life’s challenges as ever-present, broad-reaching, and as a negative personal reflection are less resilient. They might say “this all sucks, it’s always sucked, it will always suck, and it’s because I suck”.
That broad scope of strife wears them down. Resilient people remind themselves that challenges come and go, that we all go through hard times, and those hard times are not personal failing. Loneliness can whittle away mental toughness. This isn’t the same as being alone, but the feeling of being emotionally isolated, disconnected, or ostracized. Learning to be physically alone can be beneficial if we’re still able to emotionally connect with the feeling that we are loved, supported, and accepted.
Fortunately, mental toughness can be cultivated. According to the American Psychological Association, you can build your resilience through a combination of personal practices, mindset shifts, and connections with positives outside yourself.
Cultivate a growth mindset and embrace optimism: A growth mindset is built on the belief that our setbacks are not failures, but opportunities to grow towards our goals. Similarly, optimism is how we explain to ourselves that challenges are short-term, don’t affect our whole lives, and aren’t a sign we’re bad as people.
Building mental toughness isn’t a single activity but an ongoing process. You can cultivate daily practices that build your resilience:
Link meaning, purpose, and your “Big Why” to your daily habits – it’s likely your daily wellness habits relate to your values, purpose, and long-term goals. Keeping those things in mind helps you maintain a long-term and optimistic outlook.
If you find yourself without something to look forward to you know it’s time to plan a positive experience to cut through stress.
We idealize mental toughness for extreme athletes and executives, but we all have storms to weather during our lives. Cultivating everyday resilience, regardless of your circumstances, is part of fostering lasting growth, wellbeing, and happiness.
Fortunately, mental toughness can be grown through regular practices, shifting your mindset, and caring for yourself with compassion.
Original article: Toughen up: building mental strength from the inside out
Let us know if you have any questions about what we do. We'll reply as soon as possible.