Category Topic: Resilience Show all
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Lifelong Relational Health is the Foundation of Resilience
Share Lifelong Relational Health is the Foundation of Resilience on Facebook Share Lifelong Relational Health is the Foundation of Resilience on Twitter Share Lifelong Relational Health is the Foundation of Resilience on Linkedin Email Lifelong Relational Health is the Foundation of Resilience linkNewborns enter the world completely dependent upon their caregivers, not only for their physical needs of food, warmth, and protection, but for emotional needs as well. Born with only the foundation for the cerebral cortex present, a newborn’s brain makes one million connections every second for the first 3 years of life. This wiring is driven by moment-to-moment experiences in their daily lives, underscoring the critical need for safe and stable, nurturing relationships in safe and stable nurturing environments.
When newborns experience sustained adversity such as unpredictability and abuse, the brain wires survival responses more densely.
When newborns experience sustained neglect (lack of nurturing and/or basic needs), the brain slows its wiring.
When newborns experience “good enough” parenting/caregiving, the brain wires in a way that supports health and well-being.
The mutual responsiveness of adult-child relationships sets the foundation for all the learning, behavior and health that will occur in the future. This means that emotions experienced by the newborn, including the experience of calming down after upset (regulation), feeling safe and warm, and feeling seen and loved, turn on the genes that form the brain, with the emotional/intuitive structures of the brain growing first. These experiences form, and inform, a lifelong outlook, or worldview, as well.
“If emotion is the ground of cognition, then relationships are the tectonic plates that shape the ground,” says Gabor Mate, physician and trauma informed expert in his book, The Myth of Normal. Society values rational, well-thought-out behavior. We need to realize that the parts of our brains responsible for rational thought - the very way we perceive the world and our experiences - is built on the emotional brain, and that caregiver relationships drive our earliest emotional experiences.
Supportive social relationships are critical to well-being in adulthood as well, not just for happiness but for physical health and longevity. Loneliness lowers immunity and increases the risk of chronic diseases like heart disease, stroke, diabetes, and dementia.
Knowing this, we recognize the flawed thinking in putting the onus of resilience onto the individual by defining resilience as grit, optimism, determination, and self-regulation. It’s not that these aren’t valuable but they underemphasize the value and necessity of relational health as the foundation of resilience. Therefore, to foster true resilience we must prioritize relational health:
Individually, by recognizing we have relationships with ourselves that we can strengthen through self-awareness, self-compassion and self-reflection
Interpersonally, by being intentional about connecting with others (including in-person interactions – our nervous systems are wired to be in proximity to others!)
Organizationally and in community, by creating cultures of trust, inclusion, and collaboration, recognizing that we form attachment relationships at work and in community as well as with family and friends.
How is your relational health? How and where do you connect with others? We’d love to hear from you, and hear what resources would help you with connection, at the New Jersey Office of Resilience: DCF.OfficeofResilience@dcf.nj.gov.

“If emotion is the ground of cognition, then relationships are the tectonic plates that shape the ground.” – Gabor Mate, MD
References
Center on the Developing Child, Harvard University, 2025. https://developingchild.harvard.edu/
Early Relational Health Implementation Guide (N.D.). American Academy of Pediatrics. https://downloads.aap.org/AAP/PDF/AAP%20ASHEW%20Implementation%20Guide.pdf?_gl=1*19v8kb4*_ga*MTUwNDE4MTg4Mi4xNzU5Nzc4NTMz*_ga_FD9D3XZVQQ*czE3NTk3Nzg1MzMkbzEkZzAkdDE3NTk3Nzg1MzMkajYwJGwwJGgw*_gcl_au*MTg3NTY3Mzc0OC4xNzU5Nzc4NTMy*_ga_GMZCQS1K47*czE3NTk3Nzg1MzMkbzEkZzAkdDE3NTk3Nzg1MzMkajYwJGwwJGgw
Healthy Outcomes from Positive Experiences, 2025. https://positiveexperience.org/
Holt-Lunstad, J. (2021). Loneliness and social isolation as risk factors: The power of social connection in prevention. Am J. Lifestyle Med, 15(5), 567-573. Doi: 10.1177/15598276211009454 https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34646109/
Mate, G. (2022). The Myth of Normal. New York, NY: Avery, an Imprint of Penguin Random House. https://drgabormate.com/book/the-myth-of-normal/
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Science of Resilience
Share Science of Resilience on Facebook Share Science of Resilience on Twitter Share Science of Resilience on Linkedin Email Science of Resilience linkRecent advancements in neuroscience and a growing body of research are actively cultivating resilience into trauma informed approaches.
While adverse experiences can have a profound and lasting impact on health and well-being, they do not have to define an individual's future. The science of resilience shows us that the brain and body have a remarkable capacity for healing and adaptation. Concepts like neuroplasticity and neurogenesis demonstrate that the brain can create new neural pathways and cells throughout a person's life, offering a biological basis for recovery and growth.
This approach is universal, promoting whole-person care and empowering individuals to build a greater capacity for self-regulation and self-care.
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Resilience Information for Families & Children
Share Resilience Information for Families & Children on Facebook Share Resilience Information for Families & Children on Twitter Share Resilience Information for Families & Children on Linkedin Email Resilience Information for Families & Children linkStrengthening Families Curriculum: Parental Resilience - Center for the Study of Social Policy
Strengthening-Famillies-Building-Resilience-in-Troubled-Times-1-2col.pdf
Building Blocks for Resilience Ages 0-12 - Free Illustrated Poster - Maggie Dent
Resilience: 5 ways to help children and teens learn it - Harvard Health
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Resources & Tools on Resilience
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Guide to Resilience
Share Guide to Resilience on Facebook Share Guide to Resilience on Twitter Share Guide to Resilience on Linkedin Email Guide to Resilience linkA Guide to Resilience: Building young children’s capacity for resilience
A Guide to Resilience website provides resources to discover how protective factors within a child’s developmental environment can help build essential skills to help children cope with adversity and foster lifelong well-being.InBrief: The Science of Resilience
Video to visualize the science of resilience and understand how protective factors within a child’s developmental environment can help them build essential skills to cope with adversity. -
Research on Resilience
Share Research on Resilience on Facebook Share Research on Resilience on Twitter Share Research on Resilience on Linkedin Email Research on Resilience linkAction steps using ACEs and trauma-informed care: a resilience model
Latinx Families’ Strengths and Resilience Contribute to Their Well-being - Hispanic Research Center
The Office of Research and Child Well-Being’s Equity-Centered Strength-Focused Approach
Role of adult hippocampal neurogenesis in stress resilience - ScienceDirect