The Stockdale Paradox: How Optimism Creates Resilience
The late Vice Admiral James Stockdale’s finest hour did not come as Ross Perot’s Vice Presidential candidate, which is how most Americans got to know him. Admiral Stockdale was the highest ranking naval officer to be held prisoner during the Vietnam War, and he made it through hell.
In captivity, Stockdale was given special treatment. But I don’t mean “special” in the positive sense. Stockdale was part of the so-called “Alcatraz” gang, U.S. prisoners who were held in solitary confinement. The lights in their small cells were kept on 24 hours a day and they were forced to sleep in shackles. This ordeal went on for 8 years.
What’s the Big Idea?
How did Stockdale make it?
In the video below, Dr. Dennis Charney, a psychiatrist who is looking to find new treatments for depression and other anxiety disorders, says the key survival mechanism for Stockdale and his fellow POWs was the ability to combine realism with optimism:
The Stockdale Paradox really defines the optimism that is most important in becoming a resilient person and that is, when you’re faced with a challenge or a trauma, you look at that challenge objectively. You might make the assessment, ‘I’m in really big trouble.’ You have a realistic assessment of what you’re facing. On the other hand, you have the attitude and the confidence to say, ‘But I will prevail. I’m in a tough spot, but I will prevail.’ That is the optimism that relates to resilience.
Watch the video here:
What’s the Significance?
What was Admiral Stockdale’s source for optimism? It came from social support. In a prison cell? Although Stockdale was in solitary confinement, he was able to communicate through the wall to another POW in the cell next to him through a tap code that involved five letters in five rows.
“If they didn’t have a tap code to communicate,” Charney says, Stockdale and his fellow POWs wouldn’t have stayed sane. And yet, the POWs developed “friendships for life through the tap code from one cell to another.”
According to Charney, everyone needs a tap code. In other words, “everybody needs a set of individuals in their life that they can count on, that they can share their feelings with, that they can ask for advice in terms of facing a trauma.” That is why Charney recommends you should develop a network of friends and relatives who you can share your emotions with.
Image courtesy of Shutterstock
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