All of us will experience pain and stress, but the brain has some smart ways to protect us. Here is how to get prepared for periods of adversity
Our minds are more resilient than we know. According to a growing body of research, first popularised by psychologists Daniel Gilbert and Tim Wilson in the early 2000s, the brain has a remarkable capacity to make the best of bad events: when we encounter negative situations we subconsciously activate what is known as our psychological immune system.
A self-protective mechanism analogous to the body’s own immune system, the psychological immune system is a series of processes that our brain initiates to help us make sense of the adverse environment we might be in, assign meaning to what is happening, and ultimately find positives for the future. If we fail to land a job we had wanted, for instance, our brain might reason that the interviewer was rude and biased, therefore it wasn’t the role for us. Or, we will speak to a friend and gain a new perspective on the benefits of our existing job.
More Stories
Scientist’s ‘ruthlessly imaginative’ 1925 predictions for the future come true – mostly
‘Godfather of AI’ shortens odds of the technology wiping out humanity over next 30 years
‘I deleted news apps’: Guardian readers on how to stop doomscrolling