Current:Home > InvestWhy you should stop complimenting people for being 'resilient' -Infinite Edge Capital
Why you should stop complimenting people for being 'resilient'
View
Date:2025-04-15 22:20:03
The ability to overcome and adapt to difficult life situations seems like an overwhelmingly positive thing – right? After all, being called "strong," "tenacious" or "resilient" is usually perceived as a compliment.
But what if glorifying resilience can actually be detrimental?
For example, take the "strong Black woman" stereotype. According to Professor Inger Burnett-Zeigler, author of Nobody Knows the Trouble I've Seen: The Emotional Lives of Black Women, internalizing that trope "can often interfere with [Black women] acknowledging their mental health challenges and then going on to get the mental health treatment."
So we revisited the concept of "resilience" with Lourdes Dolores Follins, psychotherapist and licensed clinical social worker. She explains why it's OK to let yourself feel angry or frustrated sometimes — and how unexamined resilience can mask structural forces that make your life harder.
This comic, written and illustrated by Connie Hanzhang Jin, is inspired by a Life Kit episode featuring Lourdes Dolores Follins and hosted by TK Dutes. You can listen to the audio at the top of this page.
The audio portion of this episode was produced by Audrey Nguyen and Vanessa Handy, with engineering support from Stacey Abbott. We'd love to hear from you. Leave us a voicemail at 202-216-9823, or email us at LifeKit@npr.org.
Listen to Life Kit on Apple Podcasts and Spotify, or sign up for our newsletter.
veryGood! (3722)
Related
- Romantasy reigns on spicy BookTok: Recommendations from the internet’s favorite genre
- Biden’s national security adviser holds two days of talks in Malta with China’s foreign minister
- Kosovo’s prime minister blames EU envoy for the failure of recent talks with Serbia
- $6 billion in Iranian assets once frozen in South Korea now in Qatar, key for prisoner swap with US
- 'Vanderpump Rules' star DJ James Kennedy arrested on domestic violence charges
- A look at the prisoners Iran and US have identified previously in an exchange
- Just two doctors serve this small Alabama town. What's next when they want to retire?
- Seahawks receiver Tyler Lockett, with game-winning catch, again shows his quiet greatness
- Why members of two of EPA's influential science advisory committees were let go
- The UAW held talks with GM and Ford over the weekend but the strike persists
Ranking
- Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Triathlon
- A truck-bus collision in northern South Africa leaves 20 dead, most of them miners going to work
- Ex-NFL player Sergio Brown missing after his mother killed near Chicago-area home
- A look at the prisoners Iran and US have identified previously in an exchange
- Highlights from Trump’s interview with Time magazine
- Federal Reserve is poised to leave rates unchanged as it tracks progress toward a ‘soft landing’
- 702 Singer Irish Grinstead Dead at 43
- Underwater teams search for a helicopter that crashed while fighting a forest fire in western Turkey
Recommendation
Head of the Federal Aviation Administration to resign, allowing Trump to pick his successor
What Detroit automakers have to give the UAW to get a deal, according to experts
The bizarre secret behind China's spy balloon
Anderson Cooper on the rise and fall of the Astor fortune
Juan Soto to be introduced by Mets at Citi Field after striking record $765 million, 15
Speaker McCarthy running out of options to stop a shutdown as conservatives balk at new plan
Maine man who disappeared after driving wife to work found trapped in truck in New Hampshire woods
Maine man who disappeared after driving wife to work found trapped in truck in New Hampshire woods