Resilience 5/9
The One Question That Changes Everything
When a setback hits, most people ask “why me?” — there’s a better question.
Your automatic brain isn’t always your friend.
You have a voice inside your head. It runs constantly. It connects experience to opinion to self-judgment — often without asking you first.
When something hard happens, the automatic voice has a script: “This always happens to me.” “I should’ve known.” “I’m not cut out for this.” It chases its own tail. Comparable to a dog circling, the brain spins narratives that lead you further from where you actually want to be.
Resilience is the quiet act of interrupting that voice — pausing long enough to ask a different question. Not “why is this happening?” but something steadier.
That single question reframes a setback as a stepping stone. It works because your brain answers any question you give it. Ask a bitter one, get bitter. Ask a curious one — get growth.
Pick something real.
Could be small or large. Specific helps. Work, relationship, body, money, time — whatever’s actually pressing on you right now.
Don’t force a silver lining. Just look honestly. What could this experience be sharpening, revealing, or asking of you? Sometimes the lesson is “set a boundary.” Sometimes it’s “ask for help.”
That two-step move — name the setback, then ask the better question — is the entire technique. Use it any time. Use it ten times a day. You don’t need permission, you don’t need a coach. It’s yours now.