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Ever notice how some people seem to navigate life’s storms with an almost supernatural calm?
While the rest of us are frantically texting friends for advice or doom-scrolling through social media for distraction, they’re sitting there, composed, handling their challenges solo.
I used to think these people were just born different. Maybe they had some genetic advantage or grew up in particularly stable environments.
After studying psychology and spending years observing human behavior, I’ve realized something profound: Exceptional emotional strength is about developing the capacity to sit with yourself, especially when things get tough.
The fascinating thing is that psychology has identified specific behaviors that indicate this rare form of resilience.
These are simple actions that, when done alone, reveal a depth of emotional maturity most people never develop.
1) You can sit with uncomfortable emotions without immediately seeking distraction
Remember the last time you felt anxious, sad, or frustrated? What was your first instinct? If you’re like most people, you probably reached for your phone, called a friend, or found some other way to escape the feeling.
But here’s what I’ve learned: The ability to simply sit with discomfort, without running from it, is a superpower.
When I was in my mid-20s, anxiety was my constant companion. Every uncomfortable emotion sent me spiraling into distraction mode.
Netflix binges, endless social media scrolling, or anything to avoid actually feeling what I was feeling. It wasn’t until I started practicing mindfulness that I realized I was making things worse.
Emotional avoidance actually intensifies psychological distress over time. When we constantly run from our feelings, they just get louder.
People with exceptional emotional strength have learned to be present with their emotions. They simply observe them, knowing that all emotions are temporary visitors, not permanent residents.
2) You can make important decisions without polling everyone you know
How many group chats have you started with “Okay, I need advice…”?
How many times have you asked five different people the same question, hoping someone will tell you what you want to hear?
Look, seeking input isn’t wrong but there’s a difference between gathering perspectives and being unable to trust your own judgment.
During my time in Southeast Asia, I had to make countless decisions without my usual support network readily available.
Time zones meant I couldn’t always call home, and cultural differences meant local friends didn’t always understand my dilemmas.
This forced me to develop something I’d been avoiding: Trust in my own wisdom.
In my book, Hidden Secrets of Buddhism: How To Live With Maximum Impact and Minimum Ego, I explore how Buddhist philosophy teaches us to look inward for answers rather than constantly seeking external validation.
The truth is, you often already know what you need to do. The endless polling is just fear dressed up as thoroughness.
3) You can celebrate your achievements without needing immediate external validation
Got a promotion? Finished a challenging project? Made a positive life change? What’s your first move?
For most of us, it’s announcing it to the world. We post on social media, text our friends, call our parents.
There’s nothing inherently wrong with sharing good news, but can you also sit with your achievement privately first? Can you feel proud without anyone else knowing?
This is harder than it sounds. We’ve been conditioned to seek external validation from childhood: Good grades meant praise from teachers, and sports achievements meant trophies and recognition.
We learned early that accomplishment equals external acknowledgment.
However, people with exceptional emotional strength have developed an internal validation system. They can feel genuine pride and satisfaction without the immediate dopamine hit of likes and comments.
They celebrate with themselves first, making external recognition a bonus, not a necessity.
4) You can admit mistakes to yourself without spiraling into self-hatred
Most of us fall into one of two camps when we mess up.
Either we immediately deflect blame (it wasn’t really my fault because…), or we dive headfirst into brutal self-criticism (I’m such an idiot, I always do this, I’ll never change).
Neither approach requires real emotional strength. Deflection is avoidance, and self-hatred is just another form of drama that keeps us from actual growth.
According to Dr. Kristin Neff’s research on self-compassion, the ability to acknowledge our mistakes without harsh self-judgment is linked to greater emotional resilience and psychological well-being.
It’s about saying, “Yes, I messed up. This is what happened. This is what I’ll do differently next time,” without the theatrical self-flagellation.
I learned this lesson the hard way after leaving Australia. I’d made some questionable decisions, burned some bridges, and had to face the fact that I’d been running from my problems rather than solving them. The tendency was to either justify everything or hate myself for it.
Finding that middle ground, that place of honest self-assessment without self-destruction, that’s where real strength lives.
5) You can change your mind without needing others to agree with your new perspective
When was the last time you changed your opinion on something important? And more importantly, did you need everyone around you to validate that change?
We live in an age where changing your mind is often seen as weakness, as flip-flopping, as not knowing who you are.
But the ability to evolve your thinking based on new information or experiences, without requiring a committee’s approval, is actually a sign of exceptional emotional maturity.
I’ve changed my mind about countless things over the years. Career paths, lifestyle choices, philosophical beliefs. Each shift required me to stand in the discomfort of potentially being wrong before, and potentially being wrong again.
Some people preferred the old version of my thinking. But waiting for universal agreement would have meant never growing at all.
6) You can spend extended time alone without feeling lonely or anxious
There’s a massive difference between being alone and being lonely: One is a physical state, the other is an emotional one.
And the ability to be alone without loneliness? That’s becoming increasingly rare.
People who can enjoy solitude tend to be more creative and less stressed, but here’s the catch: It’s about being comfortable in your own company when solitude naturally occurs.
In my book, Hidden Secrets of Buddhism: How To Live With Maximum Impact and Minimum Ego, I discuss how Buddhist meditation practices teach us to find completeness within ourselves. This means not needing others to fill a void within us.
Can you go to a restaurant alone without feeling self-conscious? Take a trip by yourself? Spend a weekend without plans or social interaction and feel refreshed rather than isolated?
These are signs that you’ve developed a healthy relationship with yourself.
Final words
Here’s what I want you to understand: Developing these abilities isn’t about becoming a lone wolf or rejecting human connection.
Some of the emotionally strongest people I know have rich, deep relationships. The difference is that their connections come from choice, not desperation.
They seek advice because they value perspective, they share achievements because they want to include others in their joy, and they enjoy company because humans are social creatures.
Building exceptional emotional strength is a practice.
Some days you’ll nail it, feeling completely at peace with yourself and your decisions, while other days you’ll catch yourself refreshing Instagram for the fifteenth time and looking for validation on a decision you’ve already made.
That’s okay, even recognizing these patterns is a sign of growth!
The goal is progress, slowly building your capacity to be your own emotional anchor.










