An excerpt from the book
"Organizational Behavior: A Modern Approach" by Arun kumar and N.
Meenakshi,read on:
RESILIENCE
Some people suffer severe tragedies and hardships. Their
children die in accidents, they are terminally ill, they get fired, they are
divorced. Their lives should have been in disarray, but they go about their
lives as if everything is just fine with them. They look forward to what future
holds for them. They are resilient people. Lesser mortals face minor tragedies
and hardships, and yet get depressed. They dread future. They are fragile
people. A person’s education, experience, and training are important, but his
level of resilience will determine whether he will fail or succeed.
Resilience is the
skill and the capacity to be robust under conditions of enormous stress and
change. It is a reflex, a way of facing and understanding the world that is
deeply entrenched into a person’s mind and soul. Resilient people and companies
face reality with staunchness. They make meaning of hardship instead of crying
out in despair. They are constantly improvising to save themselves.
Reality
It is believed that resilience stems from a person’s
optimistic nature. It is true but only as long as such optimism does not
distort his sense of reality. In extremely adverse situations, an optimistic
outlook can result in disaster. Resilient people have very sober and
down-to-earth views of those parts of the reality that matter for survival. An
optimistic outlook is helpful in getting over a moderately difficult problem,
but a cool, almost pessimistic, sense of reality is more important for more
daunting challenges.
It is important that the person or the organization
understands and accepts the painful reality of the situation because most
people and organizations slip into denial mode as a coping mechanism. It is
unpleasant and emotionally wrenching to face painful reality, and people avoid
facing painful reality for as long as they can. When a person acknowledges the
impending hardship, he prepares himself to act in ways that allow him to endure
and survive the hardship i.e. he trains himself to survive before he faces the
hardship. He prepares himself to use every means to save himself for the next
day.
Meaning
When a person goes through hardships and tragedies, he
sees himself as a victim. He asks himself as to why he has to go through all
this pain. Living through hardship carries no lesson for him. The resilient
person makes meaning of the hardships and tragedies he is going through because
he possesses a strong value system. His value system enables him to interpret
his hardships and tragedies in ways that makes him believe that they are
inevitable and they are destined to go through them. Such an interpretation
helps him to rise above the sufferings of the moment and look forward to a
better future. The meaning helps him to connect to the future.
Companies that survive crisis also have strong value
systems which do not change over the years. They find purposes beyond making
money. The values shape the company’s decisions during the crisis. The values
shape the reactions of the employees to the crisis. The employees live the
value of the company during the crisis.
Rituals
The resilient person has the ability to make do with
whatever is at hand. He is inventive. He has the ability to improvise a
solution to a problem without proper tools. He makes the most of whatever he
has. He puts objects to unfamiliar uses. In concentration camps, resilient
inmates keep pieces of string or wire, believing that they might need them
sometime. He always keeps tinkering and tries every possible solutions when
ordinary mortals are paralyzed by the gravity of the situation. The resilient
person keeps pegging with the hope that one of the things that he is trying
will eventually work.
Companies which survive crisis are full of improvisers.
The employees do not wait for orders from the top. They do whatever they think
will help them to retrieve the situation. These companies and people who
survive crisis live on rules and rituals. These companies understand that the
employees cannot be creative under stressful situations and they can respond
only in their habituated ways. Rules and rituals enable employees to keep doing
what they are supposed to do. Employees feel less distracted by the crisis and
they sure are inching out of the crisis because the rules and rituals ensure
that there is some action taking place to retrieve the situation. Employees who
know what they have to do in what situation are not paralyzed when a painful
situation strikes them. The rituals guide their actions and keep them moving
ahead.
The authors can be contacted on nmeenakshi@niilm.com and akumar@niilm.com
Resilience calls for a certain amount of equanimity. Managing oneself becomes a lot easier once a person develops a certain degree of resilience, which can only be done over a period of time with a lot of practice. In this era of knowledge driven organizations, resilient employees can be a huge positive asset for an organization. Besides this, of course, one's personal life becomes remarkably better.
ReplyDeleteEverything about this virtue is positive....only its imbibition into one's personality is something that can be achieved with sheer conviction and a lot of self control...Practice for sure is the key.
DeleteGood and inspiring reading. As rightly said - when the going gets tough, the tough (resilient)gets going.
ReplyDeleteA beautiful article, a must read for all. However, the rules & rituals part was not very convincing. Keep up the good work.
ReplyDelete