A groundbreaking, practical three-week program to help you cope with life’s tough moments, overcome misfortune, build habitual resiliency, and ultimately boost your overall happiness.
Truly happy and successful people share a common trait: resilience. Not only do they know how to rebound from setbacks, they are strengthened by challenges, gaining the emotional toughness to persevere, whether facing a professional crisis, a personal tragedy—or just an ordinary bad day. The good news is that with the right tools, you can train yourself to be resilient—and become happier, healthier, and more successful.
In 21 Days to Resilience Dr. Zelana Montminy gives you a practical, concrete toolkit to develop your capacity to recover quickly. Each day of her powerful program, Dr. Montmimy introduces a key concept necessary to improve resiliency and enhance wellbeing—such as courage, focus, positivity, self-care, and social support—then provides three quick skills to accomplish. Throughout the book, she teaches you lifelong skills you can continue to practice and return to as needed to keep your resiliency muscles strong.
Combining science, real-life anecdotes, exercises, and insights from practical experience, 21 Days to Resilience provides the foundation for happiness and shows you how to achieve it—how to bounce back from any disappointment, hurdle, or misfortune—for the rest of your life.
Dr. Zelana Montminy is a positive psychologist and health and wellness expert who has contributed to Good Morning America, The Today Show, FOX, E!, People, Redbook, Shape, and PopSugar. Dr. Montminy is a member of the American Psychological Association, is a consultant for the Institute for Applied Positive Research, and serves on several boards, including the Pacific Region of the Young Presidents’ Organization (YPO) and the program advisory board of the Respect Institute. She holds master’s and doctorate degrees in clinical psychology with a specialization in health and a focus in positive psychology, and she studied nutrition at Cornell University. She lives in Los Angeles with her husband and two young children.