Addiction Recovery Tips: How to Cultivate Resilience through Mindset

When faced with difficult times or challenging experiences, having resilience can be an important tool – especially for those in recovery from drug or alcohol addiction. What is resilience and how does one cultivate resilience in addiction recovery?

First, what is resilience anyway? Resilience is the ability to bounce back, or rise above adversity. This can be either as an individual, family, or a community. Resilience is also the process of using available resources to negotiate hardships and/or the consequences of adverse events.

There are many ways to cultivate resilience. Some include the following: developing a sense of belonging, being mindful, engaging in intentional discomfort, and cultivating a growth mindset.

A growth mindset –the opposite of a fixed mindset – means believing things can be improved or changed through hard work, input from others, and good strategies. For example, if you look at a difficult situation as a challenge instead of a problem, that’s a growth mindset. Someone with a fixed mindset might just see a challenge as a place to get stuck.

If you don’t have a growth mindset just yet, have no fear: It’s easy to cultivate.

These are just two possible ways to adjust your mindset. Like the principles of recovery, these simple practices are not always easy to do and are so worth it in the long run.

First, practice gratitude, daily. This can take the form of journaling, writing down or sharing what you are grateful for. Some people even do a group text for their gratitude!

Taking it one more step, a technique I learned from Brene Brown is to get specific with your gratitude. Although saying “I am grateful for my family” is a good start, can you push yourself to identify the details of why you are grateful? For me, it is identifying that my daughter made me laugh by saying something silly. In my gratitude journal, I write down exactly what she said. Then, verbalize your gratitude out loud to someone.

A second practice for cultivating a growth mindset is to focus on the good. When you are finding yourself, or the other person in a conversation focusing on the negative, the struggle or being pessimistic, change the focus to the good. Simply asking, tell me something good. What is something good about your day? What is something positive about the situation?

Life is not always going to be rainbows and unicorns. If you work on developing your resilience through mindset, you will have a better outlook on how to overcome adversity instead of being held down by it.

Want to understand or learn more? Check out this Harvard Business School article and Alison Ledgerwood TED talk.


GLORIA ANDERSON

alcohol+drug+addiction+treatmentGloria is inspired to help people grow and reach their full potential. She has pursued this passion through over a decade of counseling and teaching in the field of substance abuse and co-occurring disorders, working in university settings and in outpatient, intensive outpatient and long-term residential treatment centers, including the Hazelden Betty Ford Foundation. Gloria is a licensed clinical mental health counselor, holds a Master’s in Counseling and Psychology and is trained in Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR). Gloria and her family are transplants from New York City, and enjoys the way that living in Utah allows them to connect to each other, the community and the outdoors. She loves the energy, compassion and willingness of Acqua colleagues to change when it means better care and better outcomes for our residents. Her counseling and administrative skills are a key part of Acqua’s clinical team; her intelligence, humor and hard work are a key part of our family here.

Addiction Recovery Tips: How to Cultivate Resilience through Mindset

Dr. Daniel Pickrell

Dr. Daniel Pickrell
Medical Reviewer

Dr. Pickrell is a board-certified psychiatrist with interests in addiction and psychiatry. He strives to identify the underlying cause of substance use. His understanding of addiction as the overlapping symptoms of biopsychosocial development is the foundation to his care model. He is committed to helping both patients and families understand that addiction is a treatable medical illness. He has been involved in the treatment of addiction for the last 17 years and completed his residency training at the University of Utah.

When faced with difficult times or challenging experiences, having resilience can be an important tool – especially for those in recovery from drug or alcohol addiction. What is resilience and how does one cultivate resilience in addiction recovery?

First, what is resilience anyway? Resilience is the ability to bounce back, or rise above adversity. This can be either as an individual, family, or a community. Resilience is also the process of using available resources to negotiate hardships and/or the consequences of adverse events.

There are many ways to cultivate resilience. Some include the following: developing a sense of belonging, being mindful, engaging in intentional discomfort, and cultivating a growth mindset.

A growth mindset –the opposite of a fixed mindset – means believing things can be improved or changed through hard work, input from others, and good strategies. For example, if you look at a difficult situation as a challenge instead of a problem, that’s a growth mindset. Someone with a fixed mindset might just see a challenge as a place to get stuck.

If you don’t have a growth mindset just yet, have no fear: It’s easy to cultivate.

These are just two possible ways to adjust your mindset. Like the principles of recovery, these simple practices are not always easy to do and are so worth it in the long run.

First, practice gratitude, daily. This can take the form of journaling, writing down or sharing what you are grateful for. Some people even do a group text for their gratitude!

Taking it one more step, a technique I learned from Brene Brown is to get specific with your gratitude. Although saying “I am grateful for my family” is a good start, can you push yourself to identify the details of why you are grateful? For me, it is identifying that my daughter made me laugh by saying something silly. In my gratitude journal, I write down exactly what she said. Then, verbalize your gratitude out loud to someone.

A second practice for cultivating a growth mindset is to focus on the good. When you are finding yourself, or the other person in a conversation focusing on the negative, the struggle or being pessimistic, change the focus to the good. Simply asking, tell me something good. What is something good about your day? What is something positive about the situation?

Life is not always going to be rainbows and unicorns. If you work on developing your resilience through mindset, you will have a better outlook on how to overcome adversity instead of being held down by it.

Want to understand or learn more? Check out this Harvard Business School article and Alison Ledgerwood TED talk.


GLORIA ANDERSON

alcohol+drug+addiction+treatmentGloria is inspired to help people grow and reach their full potential. She has pursued this passion through over a decade of counseling and teaching in the field of substance abuse and co-occurring disorders, working in university settings and in outpatient, intensive outpatient and long-term residential treatment centers, including the Hazelden Betty Ford Foundation. Gloria is a licensed clinical mental health counselor, holds a Master’s in Counseling and Psychology and is trained in Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR). Gloria and her family are transplants from New York City, and enjoys the way that living in Utah allows them to connect to each other, the community and the outdoors. She loves the energy, compassion and willingness of Acqua colleagues to change when it means better care and better outcomes for our residents. Her counseling and administrative skills are a key part of Acqua’s clinical team; her intelligence, humor and hard work are a key part of our family here.

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