"Resilience" is a coping strategy, not a virtue.
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"Resilience" is a coping strategy, not a virtue. Celebrating resilience without interrogating the challenges, problems, and structural issues folks are routinely forced to confront runs the risk of idealizing the capacity to suffer.
@sashag see also: cis people telling trans people "you're so brave" without questioning why transition might require "bravery"🫠
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@sashag see also: cis people telling trans people "you're so brave" without questioning why transition might require "bravery"🫠
@ar True! I often tell people „I’m not brave, I don’t have a choice.“
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"Resilience" is a coping strategy, not a virtue. Celebrating resilience without interrogating the challenges, problems, and structural issues folks are routinely forced to confront runs the risk of idealizing the capacity to suffer.
@sashag you're so strong.
...
I wasn't given a choice
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"Resilience" is a coping strategy, not a virtue. Celebrating resilience without interrogating the challenges, problems, and structural issues folks are routinely forced to confront runs the risk of idealizing the capacity to suffer.
@sashag "Celebrating Resilience" is just another way of saying #ArbeitMachtFrei".
THE WORST IDEA IN THE HISTORY OF THE WORLD.
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"Resilience" is a coping strategy, not a virtue. Celebrating resilience without interrogating the challenges, problems, and structural issues folks are routinely forced to confront runs the risk of idealizing the capacity to suffer.
@sashag hrm. my therapist recently told me that developing resilience is a good thing. ...i'm not sure that word means what she thinks it means...
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@sashag hrm. my therapist recently told me that developing resilience is a good thing. ...i'm not sure that word means what she thinks it means...
@rothko There are two meanings indeed. The one your therapist probably talked about is more about protecting yourself from being hit hard by external forces/influences.
The other one often used in management and every day discourse is about fighting through/enduring the hardships.
So while the first version allows you to decline things you're actually don't want to do or can't do without hurting yourself, the second one frames enduring bad things at all times as a matter of honor, no matter what is the cost.
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This was a quote by a Twitter user. But I left Twitter, so I can't check that anymore
@sashag It seems to be a quote by Dr. Charisse Burden-Stelly: https://twitter.com/drcbs_/status/1539737405091110912 -
@rothko There are two meanings indeed. The one your therapist probably talked about is more about protecting yourself from being hit hard by external forces/influences.
The other one often used in management and every day discourse is about fighting through/enduring the hardships.
So while the first version allows you to decline things you're actually don't want to do or can't do without hurting yourself, the second one frames enduring bad things at all times as a matter of honor, no matter what is the cost.
@sashag yeah, i'm sure she was talking about the first one, but i still cringed.
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@sashag It seems to be a quote by Dr. Charisse Burden-Stelly: https://twitter.com/drcbs_/status/1539737405091110912
@mkl Thank you!
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"Resilience" is a coping strategy, not a virtue. Celebrating resilience without interrogating the challenges, problems, and structural issues folks are routinely forced to confront runs the risk of idealizing the capacity to suffer.
@sashag If I hear the phrase "mental resilience" once more at my office....I'll have heard it once more too many...sigh.
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@sashag yeah, i'm sure she was talking about the first one, but i still cringed.
@rothko It has this connotation. I have a whole conference talk about why "software engineers aren't Klingons". Nobody should have to be "proud" of battle wounds.
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J jaddy@friend.enby-box.de shared this topic