resiliency overview

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COMPREHENSIVESOLDIER & FAMILY FITNESS

ENHANCING PERFORMANCEBUILDING RESILIENCE

Volunteers

Introduction to ResiliencyIntroduction to Resiliency

Volunteer ManagementSession 1 of 1

COMPREHENSIVESOLDIER & FAMILY FITNESS

ENHANCING PERFORMANCEBUILDING RESILIENCE

Resiliency Overview

Copyright © 2014 The Trustees of the University of Pennsylvania. All rights reserved. 2

Understanding ResilienceTop of Participant Guide page 8

Share words you feel that capture resilience.

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What is resilience?

A resilient individual is one who is willing to take calculated, necessary risks, and to capitalize on opportunity.

Resilience is the ability to grow and thrive in the face of challenges and bounce back from adversity.

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Resilient people bounce, not break.

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You Not You

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Resilience Myth Resilience Fact

Never show emotion Regulate emotion

Only about the individual About individuals and relationships

Must handle everything on your own

Asking for help is a resilient strategy

Always act fast Know when to slow down

Always fully composed Not always pretty

Have it or you don’t Everyone can develop it Resilient people never burn

outRejuvenation fuels resilience

Resilience Myths and Facts

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Resilience Competencies

1. Self-awareness2. Self-regulation3. Optimism4. Mental Agility5. Strengths of Character6. Connection

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Photo © 2014 Univ. of Penn. All rights reserved.

Resilience Competencies

1. Self-awareness: Identify thoughts, emotions, and behaviors Identify patterns in thinking and behavior,

particularly counterproductive patterns Be open and curious

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Photo © 2014 Univ. of Penn. All rights reserved.

Resilience Competencies

2. Self-regulation: Regulate impulses, emotions, physiology, and

behaviors to achieve goals Express emotions appropriately Stop counterproductive thinking

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Resilience Competencies

3. Optimism: Hunt for what is good Fight the Negativity Bias Remain realistic Identify what is controllable Maintain hope Have confidence in self and team

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Photo courtesy of U.S. Army

Resilience Competencies

4. Mental Agility: Think flexibly, accurately, and thoroughly (FAT) Take other perspectives Identify and understand problems Be willing to try new strategies

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Photo courtesy of U.S. Army

Resilience Competencies

5. Strengths of Character Know your top Character Strengths and how to

use them to overcome challenges and meet goals Have faith in one’s Character Strengths, talents,

and abilities Demonstrate an “I am strong” attitude

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Resilience Competencies

6. Connection: Build strong relationships Use positive and effective communication Develop empathy, tracking Be willing to ask for help Support others

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Photo courtesy of U.S. Army

Resilience skills make you stronger, not softer.

They increase your ability to cope with stress. They increase your ability to overcome setbacks. They increase your ability to solve problems. They increase your ability to remain task focused. They increase your ability to perform under

pressure. They increase your confidence. They decrease helplessness, depression, and

anxiety.

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Resilience Competencies Key Principles

Bounce, not break: Resilient people bounce, not break, when faced with an adversity or challenge.

Can be developed: Everyone can enhance his or her resilience by developing the MRT competencies.

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Resilience Skills

16

Our Model

Crawl Walk Run

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Photo © Oksun70, Dreamstime.com.Used with permission.

Photo © Andres Rodriguez, Dreamstime.com.Used with permission.

Photo © Martinmark, Dreamstime.com.Used with permission.

Skill mastery requires that you know…

What is the skill? When do I use it? How do I use it?

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MRT SkillsHunt the Good Stuff

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MRT Skills

20

Hunt the Good Stuff helps to build Optimism.

Hunt the Good Stuff builds positive emotion, such as gratitude.

Hunt the Good Stuff: B.L.U.F.

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Builds positive emotion, optimism, gratitude (studied by Robert Emmons)

Counteracts the Negativity Bias Leads to:

– Better health, better sleep, feeling calm– Lower depression and greater life satisfaction– More optimal performance– Better relationships

Hunt the Good StuffBased on work by Martin Seligman and colleagues

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Record three good things each day. Next to each positive event that you list, write a reflection (at least one sentence) about one or more of the following topics:– Why this good thing happened– What this good thing means to you– What you can do tomorrow to enable more of this

good thing– What ways you or others contribute to this good

thing

Hunt the Good Stuff Journal

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Counteracts the Negativity Bias: You can counteract the Negativity Bias–the tendency to pay more attention to bad events than positive events–by recording three good things on a regular basis.

Optimism: Optimism is a primary target of Hunt the Good Stuff.

Hunt the Good Stuff Key Principles

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How can you use Hunt the Good Stuff to enhance your performance?

How did keeping track of positive events and experiences affect how you interacted with others?

Hunt the Good Stuff Applications

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Hunt the Good Stuff:Check on Learning

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What is the skill? Hunt the Good Stuff is used to notice positive experiences to enhance optimism, gratitude, and other positive emotions.

When do I use it? Hunt the Good Stuff on a regular basis in order to counteract the Negativity Bias.

How do I use it? Write down three positive experiences from the day and write a reflection about why the good thing happened, what the good thing means to you, what you can do to enable more of the good thing, or what ways you or others contributed to the good thing.

Hunt the Good Stuff is used to notice positive experiences to enhance optimism, gratitude, and other positive emotions.

Hunt the Good Stuff on a regular basis in order to counteract the Negativity Bias.

Write down three positive experiences from the day and write a reflection about why the good thing happened, what the good thing means to you, what you can do to enable more of the good thing, and/or what ways you or others contributed to the good thing.

Today’sToday’sTake-AwaysTake-Aways

Everyone ReadyNew Approaches to Volunteer RecruitmentSession 2 of 2

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