Profound Sadness with Hope

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Profound SADNESS. Gut wrenching OUTRAGE. Questions with no satisfying answers. These are my reactions when faced with the horrific atrocities my fellow human beings to do each other.

I try to distance myself from the violence by reminding myself that I am a good person, that those who I love are known as kind and loving human beings, and that it’s only a small percentage of the seven billion people on earth who commit extreme acts of hatred. Distance, however, is mollifying and numbing, not contributing to changing anything.

I want to MAKE A DIFFERENCE for the GOOD. I want my life to count on the side of LIFE ENHANCING VALUES AND BEHAVIOR. I do not want to annihilate anyone who disagrees with me or is different from me. Yet, I recognize and have to admit the instinctual human tendencies in me toward angry flare ups and murderous thoughts. What can I do? First CONTINUALLY TRANSFORM THE TERRORIST INSIDE ME, then CONTRIBUTE TO ALL THE GOODNESS in the world.

Please consider my NEWLY PUBLISHED EBOOK, Five Key Strategies of Thriving, a SHORT READ that tells my best practices based on 1011 years of accumulated wisdom from 20 thrivers interviewed on what it takes to THRIVE THROUGH DIFFICULT TIMES. It is available at Amazon Kindle store and, I am proud to say, it became a BESTSELLER in its categories.

Go to http://www.amazon.com/dp/B01GF8NN22#navbar for YOUR COPY. Then consider CONTRIBUTING YOUR STRATEGY to the NEXT EDITION.

Be a Placeholder for Love and a Beacon of Kindness.
Joyce Ann Tepley

Take a Problem Solving Approach to Life

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This is an excerpt from my upcoming course called Master the Art of Thriving.

Life is a series of problems to be solved. That is stating the obvious. Our brains are hard-wired for problem solving. It’s our brain’s main function; that and regulating our body’s systems. If the pre-frontal cortex of a person’s brain is not damaged he will be able to solve problems with logical analysis. The scientific method is based on logical analysis. We were taught in school a step-by-step process of how to solve math problems, how to analyze biological and chemical data from research and experiments, how to analyze poems and stories in literature classes, and how to debate an issue using logical progression. Feelings and intuition were not a part of the equation. Many people spend their whole lives working in careers that utilize the skills derived from the executive functioning parts of their brains. The ‘left’ sides of their brains are said to be highly developed.

The thrivers I interviewed for my study thought of themselves as competent problem solvers. They expected themselves to be successful at whatever challenges they encountered or put themselves through. They did not consider failure as an option. Failure was reframed as a solution that hadn’t been discovered yet. They never thought of themselves as deficient by nature; something that could not be changed. Any deficiency was considered to be a lack of skill that could be acquired if one chose to. They spent little time looking for someone to blame for their problems, though they may have identified others who were part of the problem and needed to be addressed as such. For example, Peg Nosek created a health care program for disabled women who use wheelchairs. Part of the program is advocating with health care workers to create better resources to accommodate women in wheelchairs, such as encouraging gynecologists to purchase an examination table that adjusts to a height for easy transfer from a wheelchair.

The following are the necessary bare bone steps to problem solving you can use on your own or in a group.

4 simple steps to problem solving
• Succinctly identify the problem
• Brainstorm alternative solutions
• Create an action plan
• Implement the plan with support
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Beyond Resilience

Book with Wings Anselm Kiefer 1969

In their book, Superservivors: The Surprising Link Between Suffering and Success, David B. Feldman and Lee Daniel Kravetz tell about  a significant minority of people who experience trauma actually bounce forward and feel called upon to engage in a wider world. They transform the meaning of their tragedies making those tragedies the bases for change.

I also found that to be true with the thrivers I interviewed for my study on what it takes to thrive through adversity. Every one of the thrivers reported volunteering their time, whether they had a job or not. They were committed to giving of their talents. They searched for and found meaning in difficulties, never dwelling on “why me?”

(Book With Wings by Anselm Keifer 1969)

 

What It Really Takes To Transform Trauma Into Triumph

In a frozen moment in time, Barry’s adventurous life as a mountain climber and photographer changed forever. In 1963 he was on the first American team to ascend Mount Everest. Later he was the first American to scale a mountain in Antarctica. In 1968 while filming other climbers for his mountain climbing expedition business, his helicopter crashed and he survived with a spinal cord injury that cost him the use of his legs. How did he deal with that? How could he possibly pick up where he left off? His whole life was filled with the pleasure of his strong body pushed to the max, leg muscles at his command walking the rugged terrain up craggy hills and wind-swept mountains. My God! Mount Everest, no less.

Survive, he did. But did he thrive? That came later. He was in his late twenties with the rest of his life in front of him. He told me when I interviewed him for my study on what it takes to thrive through adversity that he was fortunate to have a full life to get back to after his injury. Yes, he used a wheelchair to get around instead of his legs and he had to revamp the way he did his mountaineering business, but he actually became more successful at it. He was determined to prove that he might look like a paraplegic but it wasn’t who he was. He continued to challenge himself by white water kayaking all the rivers of the west.

What Barry epitomizes is what I found to be true from my research. Thrivers have particular personality traits that give them the strength of character needed during times of trauma and long-standing difficulties. They also employ particular strategies refined over a life-time of experience that work well for them in, not only keeping them resilient, but in transforming adversity like a magician changing a warty toad into a handsome prince.

I will write and speak more of these traits and strategies in later posts and future podcasts, but for now, I can give you one practical strategy that Barry used after he got through the initial and required time of wallowing in his grief and whining about his unwelcomed circumstances. Well, maybe two strategies.

The first is to honor your grief, especially during a traumatic event in your life. Trauma is sudden. It changes your life in ways you didn’t expect and didn’t want. Injury, the unexpected death of a loved one, a recent diagnosis of cancer, a tornado wipes out your house and town – these are events we need time to work through out of our initial shock. We shouldn’t rush ourselves out of our sadness and anger, our railing and complaining, our tears and ‘why me’s,’ because we are afraid our friends and family will abandon or try to ‘fix’ us. If they are truly our loving supporters, they will be there for us no matter what. No one who is full of life as Barry was will stay stuck in depression.

He did what you, dear reader, as a fellow thriver would do. He took a problem-solving approach to his life. This is the second strategy I will address for the end of this post. Every problem contains a seed for its solution. Barry had an established business, a customer base, and supportive family, friends and colleagues before he was injured. He was also still young and healthy. He adapted the way he physically did things and became a manager rather than a worker in his business. He took stock of his assets rather than dwelling on his losses, and he put a new plan of action into place based on what he decided he could control.

When we have long-standing, on-going illnesses and adversities like chronic pain, abusive relationships, recovering from alcohol and drug addiction, recovering from war and natural disaster related trauma, the same strategies and personality attributes apply. You cycle through them over and over. Instead of, as the saying goes, when in danger and in doubt run in circles scream and shout, thrivers find another route.