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They call you inconsistent. Overreactive. Unstable. All over the placeâŠ
but they donât really know what youâre capable of, do they?
The worst part? itâs not what they say. Itâs when you start to believe it.
- You miss a deadline⊠and feel like a fraud.
- You cancel plans⊠and wonder if youâre unreliable.
- You break a promise⊠and start to wonder if they were right to doubt you all along.
And that kind of feeling? It doesnât just sting. It sticks. It makes you question if you can really trust yourself.
And over time, you start hiding those feelingsâeven from yourself.
But hiding behind shame doesnât make flaws disappear. It stores. It waits.
And it keeps you stuck in the version of you those flaws made you believe in.
Thatâs what I think psychologist and Holocaust survivor Edith Eger meant in her book The Choice when she said:
âYou canât heal what you donât feel.â
But what if your flaws are not signs that somethingâs wrong with you?
What if they are signalsâmeant to be read, not buried?
If thatâs the case, our whole idea about resilience might be wrong.
Maybe itâs not about being tougher than everyone else⊠but knowing what to do when things go off trackâand how to come back, every time.
And if thatâs true⊠maybe youâve been blamed for the wrong reasons.
You were never broken.
Youâve just been missing the one thing that makes resilience possible.
Letâs fix that.
Stop Judging Yourself and Start Training Yourself
We live in a world obsessed with performance.
Weâre trained to show up, work hard, push through, stay consistent. But no one has ever taught you how to come back after youâve been knocked off.
- Not emotionally.
- Not mentally.
- Not even physically.
So you end up trying to power through with a drained battery, hoping discipline will carry you across gaps that actually require⊠healing.
Think about itâhow often do you judge yourself for needing a break? How often do you expect your mind to keep performing even after itâs taken a hit?
You can have drive, discipline, ambition⊠and still fall apart if you donât know how to come back from a hit.
So if you stop judging yourself and start training yourself instead, you donât just heal. You gain resilience.
And one of the most powerful ways to do that is to start building trust in who you are becoming.
- But not blind trust.
- Not fake-it-âtil-you-make-it trust.
Weâre talking about evidence-based trust.
Think about it⊠how do we build trust with anyone? We watch what they do, not what they say. And itâs the same with yourself.
You donât build self-trust by repeating affirmations. You build it by showing up for yourselfâespecially after things fall apart.
You give yourself proof that even when you crash⊠you come back. And every time you do that, even in a tiny way, your identity updates.
And this identity shift? It compounds.
The more you bounce back, the more proof you gather. The more proof you gather, the more consistent you become.
You donât just survive hard moments anymore. You learn from them.
You turn them into reference points. Evidence. Proof that this version of you knows what to do next.
Because once you start seeing resilience as a skill⊠You realize itâs all about building evidence that you already have the tools to get back to who you are.
You realize thatâŠ
Resilience is the capacity of being hurt without being wounded.
The Resilience System: A.R.M. Yourself
Ok, so⊠if thatâs true, so resilience is nothing more than a system. And like any systemâit can be built and optimized.
That might sound strange at first, especially if youâve always seen resilience as this deep, inner strength.
But hereâs something no one really talks about:
Everyone gets knocked down. Everyone spirals. Everyone reaches a point where the weight is too much. The difference is not in whether it happensâthe difference is in what you do when it happens.
And thatâs what makes this idea so powerful: You donât have to be stronger. You just have to build a system that allows you to bounce back.
Thatâs what I think Angela Duckworth talks about in her book Grit when she makes the case that perseveranceâand what most people think of as resilienceâis not a personality trait, when she says:
âGrit is not just about intensity. Itâs about consistency over time.â
And what could be better than a system to create that consistency? A system is something you can use over and over again in different situations.
So letâs break it down.
One simple way to build a resilience system is to remember this:
You can A.R.M. yourself.
A. R. M. And A.R.M. stands for:
- Awareness.
- Reset.
- Movement.
Three parts. Thatâs your system.
A â Awareness
Letâs start with Awareness because you canât fix what you donât see.
So what if the first act of resilience isnât strength⊠but just noticing?
- Noticing when your energy shifts.
- Noticing the moment you disconnect.
- Noticing when you feel triggered.
Think about how often you override that signal. You feel off, but you keep pushing. You sense tension, but you pretend itâs fine. You lose focus, but you keep going instead of stopping to ask why.
But what if you didnât wait until you were fully burned out to pay attention? What if you treated early signals like checkpoints, not interruptions?
Thatâs where Resilience starts. Awareness.
How do you do that?
Just stop yourself from reacting to something thatâs triggering you. Give yourself a few seconds and focus on telling yourself how that situation is making you feel.
âI feel overwhelmed.â
âThatâs making me angrier than I expected.â
âIâm feeling anxious.â
Thatâs Awareness. Itâs the moment you stop running the patternâand start observing it.
You havenât fixed anything yet. But youâve done the one thing most people never do. Youâve interrupted the spiral before it escalated.
R â Reset
The second part of the A.R.M. System of Resilience, remember A. R. M., is the âRâ. That stands for Reset.
Without this reset, whatever you do will deepen the problem instead of solving it. And youâve seen this before. People feel hurt by a situation and their next move makes it worse.
You canât build a healthy response on top of a hijacked nervous system. You have to break the pattern first. Then you act.
In the Awareness stage, you took the first step, remember?
You gave yourself a few seconds to notice how the situation was making you feel.
- I feel overwhelmed.
- Thatâs making me angrier than I expected.
- Iâm feeling anxious.
You brought Awareness to your emotions. Now, letâs use it to Reset.
We do that by turning that Awareness into a âwhyâ question.
Why Am I feeling overwhelmed?
Why is this making me angrier than I expected?
Why Am I feeling anxious?
Youâll be surprised how quickly your mind responds to that.
The next step in the Reset stage is to give that response a name:
Why Am I feeling overwhelmed? This is perfectionism.
Why is this making me angrier than I expected? This is fear of judgment.
Why Am I feeling anxious? This is insecurity.
And hereâs whatâs wild: by doing that, your brain starts to calm down.
Thereâs actual neuroscience behind this.
In his book Social, Matthew Lieberman, explains a phenomenon called Affect Labeling.
Hereâs what he found:
âWhen people labeled their emotions, activity in the amygdala decreased and activity in the right ventrolateral prefrontal cortex increased.â
So, when you name an emotion, you reduce activity in the amygdala, part of the brain thatâs freaking out by trying to figure out what the heck is going on, and you increase activity in the the prefrontal cortex, the part of the brain that helps you make conscious decisions.
In plain language?
Naming the problem, or affect labeling, translates whatâs hurting you into language you can use to counter whatâs hurting you.
Because your subconscious mind doesnât speak language. It speaks emotions. Thatâs a problem in and of itself because to solve a problem you need to know what problem you have.
And we use language to frame, identify, and interact with the world around us, including problems. Emotions are erratic, elusive, vague, extreme. They donât make sense, we must make sense of them.
And once we do?
Thatâs the moment we take back control. Because now, youâre not reactingâyouâre choosing. Youâve interrupted the spiral, made sense of the signal, and returned to yourself.
Now⊠itâs time to move
Not to escape the emotion, but to build something new on the other side of it.
M â Movement
Thatâs what the final stage of the A.R.M. System of Resilience, is for. âMâ Stands for Movement.
And the first thing Movement must do is to answer the question: Whatâs the next move after the Reset?
The next move is to be honest. Thatâs the key.
Movement is not a reaction to how you feel. Itâs a response to why you feel it.
Thatâs what being honest means.
Youâre not following the emotion anymore. Youâre following the reason behind it.
You already found that reason, remember?
You became aware of how you felt: âI feel overwhelmed.â
You turned your awareness into a âwhyâ question: âWhy do I feel overwhelmed?â
The answer emerged and you were able to frame it: âThis is perfectionism.â
You brought your emotions to surface. You framed them. You did the Reset.
Movement is your answer to that Reset.
And James Clear puts it very clearly in Atomic Habits when he says:
âEvery action you take is a vote for the type of person you want to become.â
And when that action is honestâaligned with what you uncovered in the resetâitâs no longer just movement.
Itâs identity-building.
So how to find this honest move?
If the real issue is perfectionism in this example, maybe the honest move is to finish the thing without making it flawless.
Because the problem didnât come from the taskâs flaws. It started the moment your perfectionism was hurt.
Thatâs the why you felt triggered.
And thatâs why the honest move isnât to fix the taskâitâs to face the belief behind it.
Honesty isnât always comfortable. But itâs never weakness.
And when you take that step, youâre proving something to yourself: Even when I fall apart⊠I know how to get back on track and move forward.
And Brené Brown said something about that in her book The Gifts of Imperfection that stuck with me:
âYou learn courage by couraging.â
In other words, you donât build courage by thinking about it. Or waiting for it. You build it by showing upâespecially when things feel messy or uncertain.
Itâs a loop. You act, you learn, you grow.
And over time, those little honest moves start to shape how you see yourself. Thatâs what resilience really is: An evidence-based opinion about yourself.
- Not willpower
- Not a strong personality
- Not an unshakable character
But undeniable evidence that you act from the why, not the wave.
You were never broken. You just never had the system.
But now you do.
You know what to be aware of.
You know how to reset.
You know how to move.
And more than that. You know how to trust yourself.
Resilience isnât a personality. Itâs a loop. A rhythm. A skill.
And every time you use it, you become someone you can count on.