Increasing Mental Flexibility
Strategies for changing unhelpful patterns of thinking and?behaving
Cognitive flexibility can help us adapt to?change
Mental flexibility is the ability to adapt cognitive processing strategies — such as thinking and planning — to face new and unexpected conditions in the environment.
I often become anxious with unexpected change, especially on short notice, even if it’s change I would otherwise be happy about. For example, I enjoy going to watch hockey, soccer, or football games (and playing hockey and soccer).
While I enjoy sports, going to a crowded arena or stadium requires quite a bit of mental preparation for me. If we’re offered last-minute tickets or are invited to join friends on short notice, my first response is feeling anxious and my first impulse is to say no, I don’t want to go.
Conversely, if I expect something to proceed in a certain way, and then we have to change course with little time to prepare, I get really thrown off, and this creates a lot discomfort for me.
Cognitive flexibility is the ability to go with the flow, to roll with changes, think on our feet, and move laterally. In some circumstances (such as my professional life) I can be very good at this because I am creative problems-solver, but in others (such as my personal life), I find this very challenging.
Cognitive rigidity can cause us to feel “stuck”, and to be closed to new experiences or trying new things.
Talk or write it?out
Take your?time
Give yourself?breaks
Set yourself up for?success
Try to pick your battles?wisely
The goal is not for us to try to think and behave like the statistical majority of people (or neurotypicals) — they have their own issues. The goal is also not to “fix” or change things about ourselves that other people think we should change.
The objective is to increase our flexibility in areas or situations where our own rigidity is causing us difficulty.
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“Treat distress, not difference.” —Joel?Salinas
Even when we recognize that our own inflexibility is causing us problems, this does not mean our feelings don’t matter. Our feelings are real and our feelings do matter.
Validating our experiences, acknowledging our emotions, and allowing ourselves to process them will help us move on to exploring possible alternatives.
? Jillian Enright, Neurodiversity MB
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Reference
Ca?as, José. (2006). Cognitive Flexibility. https://doi.org/10.13140/2.1.4439.632