WASHINGTON (Army News Service, Aug. 19, 2009) -- Some 50 Soldiers will finish up "master resilience training" today in Philadelphia -- part of the Army's Comprehensive Soldier Fitness program.
Master resilience training, taught by experts from the University of
Pennsylvania, is a "teaching the teachers" kind of thing. Close to 100
Soldiers have gone through some iteration of the training so far, and
another course is planned for November.
Eventually, the noncommissioned officers that attended the course will
go back to their home units and teach "resiliency" to their unit's
Soldiers or basic trainees.
"They're learning all the different thinking skills, and how to impart
them to other people," said Brig. Gen. Rhonda Cornum, director of
Comprehensive Soldier Fitness.
Cornum said resiliency is a way of thinking that allows Soldiers not to
fall into self-defeating traps. It takes a developed and resilient
mind, she said, to put money problems, relationship issues, health
issues, or tragedy on the battlefield into perspective, so a Soldier
can continue with the mission and with life.
"Resilience is a way of thinking -- you apply optimistic thinking to a
problem," she said. "It is really a difference between, for instance,
when you invite somebody for a date and they say no, resilient people
think 'their loss -- I'll do better next time.' What they don't think
is 'nobody will ever like me. I'm worthless.' That's really what it is.
It teaches you to remember that problems are temporary, that they are
local."
Cornum said some people naturally make the right decisions or develop
the right potential outcomes for situations in their lives. But for
others, resilient thinking will have to be learned.
"There's a pile of people out there that just pick the first thing that comes to mind," she said.
Soldiers taking the master resiliency course in Philadelphia are unit
leaders or even drill sergeants, and will take what they learn back to
their units to impart that knowledge on others, Cornum said.
"Our intention is to have every platoon sergeant and every drill
sergeant to have gone through this," Cornum said. "It's really like
part of what you do when you take somebody to the range, or when you
are teaching somebody how to have confidence about going into the gas
chamber. It is also about teaching by example in an operational
environment, how to deal with fear, and disappointment. It's tools,
thinking tools, how not to fall into thinking traps or catastrophic
thinking."
Resiliency, or mental toughness, is part of the Army's larger
"Comprehensive Soldier Fitness" program, that aims to ensure Soldiers
are as mentally tough as they are physically tough. Cornum said
Soldiers will be taught resiliency in basic training by master
resilience trainers, who themselves have gone through courses like the
one taught in Philadelphia.
Additionally, she said, Soldiers will develop mental toughness through
self-guided learning, based on assessments they will take online during
basic training and every two years afterward. Mental fitness, she said,
is like physical fitness; life-long and ongoing.
"It is something you are going to start when you come into the Army; if
you are already in, you start in the middle of your career," she said.
"And it is a long-term process. It is not something that you can do
once, any more than you can get physically fit by one trip to the gym.
This is not an individual single event. It is a way of looking at your
psychological health as important as your physical health."
Source and credits : http://www.army.mil/-news/2009/08/19/26221-soldiers-learn-to-impart-mental-toughness-on-others/?ref=news-home-title0
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