Whatever does not kill you: Traumatic experiences have silver lining

 


Your parents were right: Hard experiences may indeed make you tough. Psychological scientists have found that, while going through many experiences like assault, hurricanes, and bereavement can be psychologically damaging, small amounts of trauma may help people develop resilience.

“Of course, everybody’s heard the aphorism, ‘Whatever does not kill you makes you stronger,’” says Mark D. Seery of the University at Buffalo. His paper on adversity and resilience appears in the December issue of Current Directions in Psychological Science, a journal of the Association for Psychological Science. But in psychology, he says, a lot of ideas that seem like common sense aren’t supported by scientific evidence.

Indeed, a lot of solid psychology research shows that having miserable life experiences is bad for you. Serious events, like the death of a child or parent, a natural disaster, being physically attacked, experiencing sexual abuse, or being forcibly separated from your family, can cause psychological problems.

In fact, some research has suggested that the best way to go through life is having nothing ever happen to you. But not only is that unrealistic, it’s not necessarily healthy, Seery says.

In one study, Seery and his colleagues found that people who experienced many traumatic life events were more distressed in general—but they also found that people who had experienced no negative life events had similar problems. The people with the best outcomes were those who had experienced some negative events. Another study found that people with chronic back pain were able to get around better if they had experienced some serious adversity, whereas people with either a lot of adversity or none at all were more impaired.

One possibility for this pattern is that people who have been through difficult experiences have had a chance to develop their ability to cope. “The idea is that negative life experiences can toughen people, making them better able to manage subsequent difficulties,” Seery says. In addition, people who get through bad events may have tested out their social network, learning how to get help when they need it.

This research isn’t telling parents to abuse their kids so they’ll grow up to be well-adjusted adults, Seery says. “Negative events have negative effects,” he says. “I really look at this as being a silver lining. Just because something bad has happened to someone doesn’t mean they’re doomed to be damaged from that point on.”

 
 
  • Colin Tonks

    This study infers the effect(s) of classical conditioning. However, classical conditioning has it’s limitations and is conditional.

  • Bart Schuster

    This finding makes a lot of sense to me because I don’t think PTSD, or other chronic traumatic outcomes make people any stronger, yet without any challenging trauma, the person may not have learned how to get back up, or how much recovery and resilience they are really capable of. 

    There is probably a lot of individual differences in responses to trauma and then later resilience.  The availability and accessibility of help for initial trauma and later trauma has got to be a big factor to.  Despair, giving up, receiving blame (as victim) and prior familial preparation and perhaps even family legends of overcoming…or of self-destruction…would also be factors it seems to me. 

    Bart Schuster
    OnlineGraduateSchool.tripod.com
    Twitter.com/arrive2_net

    • http://www.avoidantpersonality.com/ AvoidantPersonality

      Could not agree more. I think “you” gave the article more depth in your observation than it does on its own.

      About trauma and resilience vs. an uneventful cruise through life – however, I think I’d opt for the latter.

      http://www.AvoidantPersonality.org

      https://twitter.com/#!/AVPDgroup