Better coping skills

Psychologists have found that we can all learn how to improve our coping skills and be more resilient.

Ten ways to build the resilience to deal with whatever life throws at you.

1. Problem solve
Try problem-solving. Work out what you need to do now to get over what’s happened to you.

Talk to people and think about taking practical steps, such as finding a support group. Sympathy feels good, and sometimes it’s tempting to be a victim and tell people how bad your troubles are, but problem-solving will be more constructive in the long run.

2. Keep calm
Try to regulate your emotions, for example by staying calm, rather than reacting violently with tears, anger or fear. Learn how to keep yourself physically calm and you will be better equipped to cope.

  • Keep your breathing relaxed and deep to help control anxiety. When we feel anxious, our breathing often becomes quick and shallow. Inhale through your nose and breathe deeply into and out of your belly (not your chest).
  • Stay physically relaxed. Exercise, warm baths and stretching are good ways to reduce muscle tension.
  • Maintain a positive attitude when times are tough by visualising or thinking about something relaxing. Take a few moments to imagine a favourite place, floating in the sea or lying in bed, and you’ll switch into a calmer physical state.

3. Remember, it's your life
Don’t feel that bad events or a dreadful childhood should lead to a life of problems. Many people survive troubled families. The majority of adult children of alcoholics do not repeat their parents' drinking patterns, and the same is true of adults who have survived families troubled by mental illness, chronic marital problems, racial discrimination and poverty.

Some children naturally rebound from knock-backs with their self-esteem intact. If you need help doing this now you’re an adult, talking to a therapist can help.

4. Be proud of surviving
Something bad happened, but you survived. Look back and try to find things about what you did or how you responded that you can be proud of. Find your strengths and build self-esteem from them.

5. Develop insight
What happened? How did it affect you? Why did other people behave the way they did? How do you feel about it? What other factors were part of what happened? People who ask themselves penetrating questions and give honest answers tend to bounce back more quickly.

6. Use humour
See the funny side and you’ll cope with the situation better. Jokes have a way of making worries shrivel up and die. A good sense of humour is a great inner strength.

7. Be realistic, not dramatic
Another strategy which can help is to write down the worst possible result on one side of a piece of paper, and the best possible result on the other. The worst result of losing a job, for instance, might be, "I’ll be unemployed for the rest of my life." The best might be, "My next job will make me a millionaire." It’s common to focus on the worst possibility, but the best possibility may be equally likely.

End by writing down in the middle of the paper the real likely future: "I’ll look for another job. It may take a while, but in the end I’ll find something I’m happy with."

8. Get support
Resilient people tend to have strong family support systems and they seek and receive help from others when they need it (a teacher, a neighbour, the parents of peers or a spouse). Don’t be ashamed to talk about your problems and get help.

9. Don't look for blame
Some people make the mistake of blaming themselves and thinking that whatever goes wrong is all their fault. They then feel guilty and worthless and give up on things.

Other people make the mistake of blaming everything that goes wrong on somebody else. This makes them feel out of control, angry and unable to take charge of their lives.

Resilient people don’t blame themselves for everything that goes wrong. Or blame everyone else. They take responsibility for their own part in it.

If you're blaming yourself, ask "How did other people contribute to this problem?". When you’re blaming others, think "How did I contribute to the problem?". This can help you see your situation more realistically.

10. Do something
Reslience grows by making something worthwhile out of painful times. Starting a support group to help others, or making something creative out of bad experiences, such as writing down what has happened, painting or singing can help you express pain and get through hard times.

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Last reviewed: 11/12/2024

Next review due: 11/12/2024

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Comments are personal views. Any information they give has not been checked and may not be accurate.

LaurenStone said on 05 August 2024

This does help. However as much as i try to make plans for my self to move upwards I cant quite stick to them. If i'm honest I feel that low with my self esteem at the moment and have done for most of my life I have found my selt feeling very sad, tired and lazy alot more. As i have no zest for life at the minute I am finding it hard to want to do anything as I can't seem to see the positives in anything. It saddens me to think i'm not even in my twenties yet and i am already feeling like this. I will be using these tips however to help me and i'd advise most people struggeling to use them or seek other help. I know it will take time I just hope I can pull myself upwards. Good luck to everyone struggeling.

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kathybramley said on 08 February 2025

I've turned this page into a worksheet for myself, and linked to it on my home wiki-media project. I have also shared it with the Mind group on facebook. I believe it is useful. On the other hand, I wish psychiatry and psychology would get their acts together. This advice does sound partly familiar from my involvement with mental health services but the emphasis has been very different - especially since I have been in the grip of obsessional-compulsive ruminations that completely took over. Some group therapy services will introduce you to these notions in a guided, supported way, when they think you are ready - the Helios centre in Bradford- for example with dbt or stand-alone training in mindfulness, groups for 'distraction' and anger management. And cognitive therapy is a kind of guided self-questioning. But crisis teams and CMHTs don't hand a printout of this when you enter services. I guess it could be unhelpful in a crisis - you need to be able to be calm to reflect and ask searching questions. You may be finding it too difficult to keep reasonable and gentle with yourself, or not fall to answers that make you feel much worse. Problem solving can be good, but again, in the grip of a crisis you might be struggling.

But wider social participation and 'normalising' coping strategies is something that seems to be important and I feel has been under-emphasised in my CMHT involvement.

I do wish psychiatry and psychology would pull together. It is very confusingly sub-optimal. They have a duty, supported by society - academia is not just for the dream of ivory towers.

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Mattie said on 07 July 2024

To those who are feeling low
When my husband left with no warning I was devastated. One way I found of rebuilding my self esteem was to make a chart initially marked into hours of each day and give them marks out of 10. Initially each hour was a one or two. Gradually scores crept up until I charted four hour sections then morning noon and night. From this I could see that i was slowly climbing out of those depths that seem far too black and deep to ever recover from. I accepted any thing that took me out of the house and mixing however hard it seemed and this way helped me to meet new friends and begin to rebuild. It will happen just be kind to yourself and don't expect too much too soon. Good luck!

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Anonymous said on 03 July 2024

i found this quite insulting
the way it is written is very much 'resilient people are good at this and that'. i know the point u are trying to make but in my depressed mind this implies that they are 'better' than us who are suffering.

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chelsea said on 18 June 2024

I might try this aswell

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Pete13 said on 23 May 2024

How low do I feel this evening. However I have just printed your advice to Build your resilience and I will pin it to a surface I see every day and try really hard and positively to get myself out of this black hole I am currently in. The biggest thing I am struggling with is bitterness and the fact that I am having to deal with these emotions of depression and no self worth due my husband's action. I do try to be positive but find it difficult to maintain. Thank you.

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