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    Norman Garmezy, a development psychologist at the University of Minnesota, met thousands of children in his four decades of research. A nine-year-old boy in particular stuck with him. He has an alcoholic mother and an absent father. But each day he would walk in to school with a smile on his face. He wanted to make sure that "no one would feel pity for him and no one would know his mother's incompetence.” The boy exhibited a quality Garmezy identified as “resilience”.

    Resilience presents a challenge for psychologists. People who are lucky enough to never experience any sort of adversity (逆境) won't know how resilient they are. It's only when they're faced with obstacles, stress, and other environmental threats that resilience, or the lack of it, comes out. Some give in and some conquer.

    Garmezy's work opened the door to the study of the elements that could enable an individual's success despite the challenges they faced. His research indicated that some elements had to do with luck, but quite large set of elements was psychological, and had to do with how the children responded to the environment. The resilient children had what psychologists call an “internal lens of control(内控点)”. They believed that they, and not their circumstances, affected their achievements. The resilient children saw themselves as the arrangers of their own fates.

    Ceorge Bonanno has been studying resilience for years at Columbia University's Teachers College. He found that some people are far better than others at dealing with adversity. This difference might come from perception(认知) whether they think of an event as traumatic(创伤), or as an opportunity to learn and grow. “Stressful” or “traumatic” events themselves don't have much predictive power when it comes to life outcomes. "Exposure to potentially traumatic events does not predict later functioning,” Bonanno said. "It's only predictive if there's a negative response.” In other words, living through adversity doesn't guarantee that you'll suffer going forward.

    The good news is that positive perception can be taught. "We can make ourselves more or less easily hurt by how we think about things," Bonanno said. In research at Columbia, the neuroscientist Kevin Ochsner has shown that teaching people to think of adversity in different ways--to reframe it in positive terms when the initial response is negative, or in a less emotional way when the initial response is emotionally “hot”---changes how they experience and react to the adversity.

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头鹤的尊严

李理

    我喜欢在自然界里观察野生的鹤,也看到过很多种鹤。我去过云南的拉市海和纳帕海,见到过黑颈鹤,也去东北见过丹顶鹤、白鹤、白头鹤、白枕鹤……可我最喜欢的,还是全球15种鹤里最普通的一种鹤——灰鹤。

    至于原因,可能是它经常和我们朝夕相处有关。

    一个大雪纷飞的冬天,我们像往常一样在保护区一带进行日常巡护。巡护车开过一片开阔的芦苇荡,我用双筒望远镜查看四周,发现远处平坦的滩涂中有一个小的凸起物。当我停下车仔细查看时,发现它好像在动。

    我觉得这是异常现象,马上往滩涂中走去。泥泞的湿地让我寸步难行,泥浆把我脚上的靴子都盖上了。我不得不停下脚步,再用望远镜看一看那物体。这下看清楚了,原来是一只灰鹤!

    在泥浆中,那只灰鹤艰难地从爬卧状态变成站立姿势,虽然站立后有些不稳,一边的翅膀有些松弛,羽毛沾满了泥浆。

    从我多年的保护经验来看,它的翅膀骨骼垂落,可能是断了,可能再也无法飞翔了……

    我继续朝它的方向前行,随后它也往远处走,好像在和我特意保持着一种距离。我怕它远离我后再受到伤害,便拼命追赶它,把脚一次次从没过膝盖的泥浆中费力拔出……

    终于,在离它只有3米远的地方,我在泥浆里用力一扑,把它抓住了。

    它用力扑腾,想摆脱我。它的力量非常大,一下子我和它都摔到了泥里。就这样,我们僵持了20秒,最后,我再次把它抱在了怀里,这回我用手攥住了它的嘴,它的眼睛一眨一眨地使劲看着我,我也看着它。

    救助鸟类这么些年,我是头一次碰到这么有个性的灰鹤。当我打开巡护车的门,要把它放进救助笼中时,我发现它看我的眼神好像在说:“我不需要救助,我要在自然中优雅地死去。”

    我静静地看着它的眼睛,被它这种眼神深深打动。于是我关上车门,带它来到水库边一个干净的水域旁,把它羽毛上的泥清洗了一下。洗干净后,我松开了双手,说了一句:“祝你好运。”

    它一下子用它那长而有力的双脚一弹,从我背后跑到了水边。它头也不回地走了大约50米远,停住了,开始整理羽毛。看得出,它越来越高兴,越来越放松了,还时不时地抖动羽毛。看到我没有跟过去,它轻松地在那里悠闲站立着。

    此后,我每天都来这里看它。它优雅的脚步是那样高贵,那样与众不同。可慢慢地,它的脚步越来越沉重,直到第四天,我看它时,它也看着我。天上其他灰鹤在上空飞过时都对它鸣叫,它却专心对着我鸣叫,鹤声嘹亮、悦耳。

    就这样,那天日落之前,它趴下了。我用望远镜看着它,没有任何挣扎也看不出任何痛苦,它优雅地死去了。

    我给了它自己选择的机会,因为翅膀断了,救助后也无法重返自然,只能在救助笼中生活,由工作人员养老送终,而这只灰鹤,个性如此顽强,那就尊重它的选择吧……

    从那时起,我记住了灰鹤与人保持的距离,100米左右,这是我现在经常给志愿者强调的人与灰鹤的警戒线距离。

    直到现在,每年都有万余只灰鹤在我面前降落,每一次,听到灰鹤鸣叫,我都会感觉幸福。

    后来,当地有个放羊的老人给我讲了一个类似的故事,放羊的老人说,这样的,就是头鹤。

(选自《意林》2015年11期)