When awful things happen, itâs difficult to know how you could possibly carry on, let alone feel happy again.
However human beings can be remarkably resilient during the toughest of times.
The School Of Life, which aims to help people develop their emotional intelligence through workshops and lectures, highlights the importance of building resilience in life.
âUltimately cultivating resilience as an emotional skill allows us not only to overcome setbacks, but also to take on a healthy level of risk - secure in the knowledge that we can weather the storm if things go wrong,â a spokesperson told HuffPost UK.
This resilience can take many forms âfrom thinking through how we cope if things go badly, to practising self-compassionâ.
Here are five people who have shown itâs possible to be resilient and move forwards, even from the toughest, most heart-wrenching situations.
Victoria Milligan is a personal trainer, mentor and writer.
In May 2013, Victoria Milligan and her family were involved in a tragic boat accident in Cornwall. The family-of-six were spending time on their speedboat when it veered out of control and they were all thrown into the water. The boat continued to turn at high speed in the water, hitting each member of her family - including her.
âThat fateful afternoon took from me my gorgeous husband Nicko and beautiful eight-year-old daughter Emily,â she said.
âThe propellers of the boat also cut my right leg and my son Kitâs left leg - his took nine months and 15 operations to save, mine was amputated that night.â
Milligan was left numb and completely in shock following the incident.
âI was a happily married mother-of-four that morning,â she explained. âBy that night I was a widow, bereaved parent, single parent and amputee.â
She credits three things for helping her through this dark time: support from friends, family and therapists; a natural disposition to talk about her emotions with others; and knowing how much love there was in her family before the accident.
âI have never felt regret that I didnât have a chance to say âgoodbyeâ to them because I know that it doesnât matter, they knew that we loved them and I know that they loved us,â she explained. âI have learnt that loss doesnât end the relationship we have with that person, it just changes it.
âThey will always be a huge part of mine and the childrenâs lives, they are interwoven into the fabric of our souls and we take them forwards with us into anything we do.â
She said that while she will never âget overâ the grief, she is slowly becoming used to its presence.
While she was terrified of the future immediately after the tragic event, she is now taking life one day at a time (âand sometimes one hour at a time if that is all I felt I could manageâ).
âI set small achievable goals: saving Kitâs leg, learning to walk on a prosthetic, going to the girlsâ sports day etc,â she explained. âThen slowly I realised I was living again and not just existing.â
Milligan likens grief to a metal spiky ball, stabbing at the heart and causing endless pain.
She said: âOver time the ends of the spikes blunt a little, until eventually the ball is smaller and round, not spiky, showing that our grief will always be there but it inflicts less and less pain on us as we get used to its constant presence.â
Jonny Benjamin is a mental health campaigner, writer, filmmaker and public speaker.
At the age of 20, Jonny Benjamin became psychotic and was admitted into a psychiatric hospital. He was later diagnosed with schizoaffective disorder.
âI was hearing a voice and being watched by cameras,â he recalled.
âI attempted to take my own life soon after I was diagnosed, believing I would not recover, but was talked out of doing so by a kind stranger.â
Benjamin said it took time to heal after the traumatic event. âFor the first few years I denied what had happened and didnât want to talk to anyone about it,â he explained.
âBut in my mid-twenties I finally began to open up to people and that was the real turning point for me.
âStarting to practice mindfulness helped me to find some peace of mind and learning about self-compassion and self-acceptance has helped me be kinder to myself.â
Benjaminâs life still has its ups and downs, with the mental health campaigner experiencing occasional relapses. However he credits his positive attitude for helping him through it.
âI had a relapse and was hospitalised again three months ago,â he revealed.
âBut I have a much more positive mindset now. I tell myself I will recover because Iâve done it before and I can most certainly do it again. And I talk. Some people may think I overshare but for me it helps. You wouldnât conceal if you were in physical distress, so why should we have to hide any mental distress?â
Poorna Bell is the executive editor of HuffPost UK and author of âChase The Rainbowâ.
In May 2015, Poorna Bellâs husband Rob died by suicide. He had been struggling with depression since childhood and had also developed a heroin addiction.
âFor three years of our relationship, he kept it hidden from me,â explained Bell.
âWhen he was alive, I helped him through his recovery as best I could, and we tried to do it alone so that few people knew about it.
âIn the end, his struggles were too great and he took his own life in New Zealand where he was visiting family at the time.â
After hearing of her husbandâs death, Bell said she didnât know how she would get through the day, let alone the week.
âI had to rapidly shrink my world and my expectations - if I could make it to the next morning, that would be enough,â she explained.
âIt then accumulated into weeks, months and I remember being shocked I had made it that far.â
The journalist and author also credits her friends and family for helping her through such a difficult time.
âThere was initially so much anger and hurt - both at what at happened and because I knew I would probably feel incredibly sad for a long time. But what I chose to do - and this was a choice - was to hold onto love,â she explained.
âBecause love leads to understanding, and understanding leads to empathy and kindness, and that is how the world changes.â
While Bell carries her grief with her, every minute of every day, she said it doesnât overwhelm her as much as it used to. It has also helped to give her a sense of perspective.
âWhen Rob first died, it seemed impossible that I would ever be able to feel and function like a normal human being again,â she said. âNow I know that I can.
âSo whenever something seems impossible, or like this is the only way I will ever feel, I take a deep breath and remember that it wonât.â
Jade Braithwaite is a French and Spanish teacher.
Jade Braithwaite lost her mum to breast cancer three years ago and, just 18 months later, her step-sister died by suicide. This year, her father passed away suddenly from a heart attack.
âIt was so devastating,â she recalled. âThe pain I felt was excruciating.â
Braithwaite had only just started to feel like she was coming to terms with her grief. But then news of her dadâs death on 9 January 2017 sent everything flying backwards.
She said her mumâs friends, as well as her own close friends and boyfriend, helped support her through the difficult time.
âBut more than anything, taking part in charity events and raising money that can help other people in similar situations has really pushed me through the difficulties,â she explained.
âKnowing that whatever money I raise will go towards something so positive gives me goosebumps. And of course knowing how proud my parents would be is extremely comforting. After my mum died I ran the âRace For Lifeâ and after my dad died it was an easy decision to take part in âMy Marathon for BHFâ.â
So what does the future look like now, compared to immediately after the event?
âImmediately after finding out my dad had died I felt sick, couldnât breathe, thought life was so unfair and wondered when my pain would stop and how I would ever recover or get a break from yet more tragedy,â she explained.
âIâm still sad and still have days where I donât want to get out of bed and socialise but thatâs okay and very normal.
âI am quite accepting that this is my life now and I welcome every opportunity or challenge with open arms.
âItâs very different to what I imagined three years ago but I try to be as positive as I can and live a life my parents would be proud of.â
Visit her fundraising page here.
Emma Slade is an ordained Buddhist nun, author and yoga and meditation teacher.
Emma Slade was held hostage at gunpoint when she was 31 years old. She was working as a financial analyst in Hong Kong when a gunman burst into her hotel room and held a gun to her chest.
âWhether I lived or died was entirely in someone elseâs hands,â she recalled.
The traumatic event left her with severe post traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), which took her a long time to recover from.
Her ordeal made her reevaluate life and, two decades after the incident took place, she is an ordained Buddhist nun and the founder of a charity helping children in Bhutan.
âAny experience of deep suffering connects us directly with the awareness both of how precious life is and of its impermanence,â she said.
âIt can also remind us of how interconnected we all our and how we all play a role in creating the world we live in. Developing kindness and a determination to not harm others is crucial.â
She said she overcame PTSD by transforming her negative experience âinto a deeper understanding of lifeâ.
âMy life and future now feel far more meaningful than they did before,â she explained. âI donât waste my time and work hard to help others.â