There is always someone in any social circle who appears to move through difficult periods with more ease than those around them, not because they are immune to stress, but because they seem to absorb it differently. New research published in The Journal of Neuroscience offers what is probably the most detailed neurological explanation yet for why some people are better at coping with adversity, and the findings are both counterintuitive and genuinely useful.
What the study found
Researchers recruited 82 participants and asked them to make a series of cost-benefit decisions under observation, accepting or rejecting various offers linked to small financial gains and losses. While participants completed the task, their brain activity was measured using MRI, specifically tracking oxygen changes in the blood as a proxy for neural activity.
The findings challenged a simple assumption: that resilient people thrive because they focus more on the positive. In fact, the brains of more resilient participants did not respond more strongly to positive information at all. What distinguished them was a stronger neural response to negative information, specifically in regions of the brain associated with cognitive control and information processing. In other words, resilient people are better at regulating and processing negative input, not at ignoring it. That enhanced processing capacity is what allows them to give slightly more weight to positive information when making decisions, and to navigate stressful situations more effectively.
The researchers concluded that these differences in how the brain values and processes information could shape behaviour in ways that make some individuals more resistant to stress and mental health difficulties than others.
What resilience actually means
It is worth clarifying what resilience is not. It is not the absence of difficult emotions. Resilient people experience anxiety, disappointment, frustration and grief in the same way that everyone does. What distinguishes them is a greater capacity to tolerate those emotions, to adjust to changing circumstances and to continue functioning while the discomfort is still present. In this sense, resilience is less a personality type than a set of psychological skills, and it exists on a spectrum rather than as a binary.
How to build it
The practical value of this research is that resilience appears to be a learnable skill rather than a fixed trait, and several evidence-based approaches exist for developing it. The foundation is physiological: quality sleep, regular physical movement and adequate nutrition all set the conditions for better emotional regulation. These are not secondary factors. They are foundational ones.
Beyond the basics, one of the more effective cognitive tools is reframing adversity specifically rather than generally. Instead of thinking in patterns that confirm difficulty as a constant, the more useful habit is to name what happened and acknowledge the navigation of it. Getting through a hard meeting is worth the acknowledgement of having got through it. The reframe is not about denying difficulty but about establishing a track record of having managed it.
Building tolerance for discomfort gradually is another approach with solid support. Resilience develops in the encounter with manageable challenges, not in the avoidance of them. Having a difficult conversation, setting a boundary, taking a calculated risk: each of these, navigated and survived, adds to the evidence the brain holds about its own capacity.
Naming emotions rather than sitting with undifferentiated distress is also worth practising. Greater emotional awareness allows for earlier intervention in a stress cycle, before intensity peaks to the point where regulation becomes significantly harder. The gap between noticing what you feel and being overwhelmed by it is exactly where these skills live.
Stress without surrender
What this body of research ultimately points to is a reframing of what a good relationship with stress looks like. It is not the elimination of stress, which is neither possible nor necessarily desirable. It is the capacity to experience stress without allowing it to fully dictate decisions and behaviour. That is both a more realistic and a more achievable goal than the frictionless life, and it is one that the neurological evidence suggests is well within reach.
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