By Tiffani Dhooge

 

We love the word “resilience.” It’s stamped on tote bags, printed on coffee mugs, baked into every strategic plan. It sounds strong. It sounds hopeful. It sounds like something we all want our kids to have, ESPECIALLY if they’ve been through something hard. 

 

We praise kids for “being so resilient” when what we really mean is, “Thank you for not making me uncomfortable with your pain.” We hand out gold stars for adaptability while ignoring the trauma it took to build those coping mechanisms. We expect teenagers in foster care to recover from things that would have leveled most adults.

31081891868?profile=RESIZE_710x

Tiffani Dhooge, President & CEO of Children's Harbor

 

Instead of calling it what it is, we wrap it in compliments:
“You’re so strong.”
“You’re so mature for your age.”

“You’re so lucky to be here. Look how far you’ve come.”

 

Let me be clear: they are not lucky; they are exhausted.  And they are still carrying the weight of what it took to survive.

 

For nearly three decades, I’ve worked with kids in foster care who’ve been abused, abandoned, and overlooked by systems that were supposed to protect them.   I’ve held their stories, met them in crisis, advocated in courtrooms, and helped them rebuild from what others call “impossible.”

We don’t get to expect resilience from kids.  We have to earn the right to help build it.  We do that with consistency, connection, and the kind of presence that doesn’t flinch when the pain spills out.  

In South Florida, Children’s Harbor is a nationally accredited nonprofit dedicated to serving teenagers in and aging out of foster care. We don’t just offer housing, we create the closest thing to home many of them have ever had. We meet them in the ashes that used to be their life and we build trust, brick by brick. And we KEEP showing up, no matter how hard they push back.  Until they start to believe what no one’s ever proven to them before: we might actually stay.

 

THAT is when resilience starts to grow.

 

Most days, resilience isn’t inspiring. It’s uncomfortable.  It’s slow. And it doesn’t photograph well.  But if we’re serious about what changes lives, this is what it actually looks like:

  1. Resilience isn’t always loud.

We love the big wins: the graduation, the scholarship, the “against-all-odds” comeback. But for trauma-impacted youth, resilience is quieter. It’s getting out of bed.  It’s making eye contact. Asking for help. Choosing not to run when something feels too hard. 

 

  1. Resilience requires permission to be angry.

We rush to reframe. To say, “At least you’re safe now…everything happens for a reason”, but resilience doesn’t grow in bypassed pain; it grows in felt pain. They need space to feel. That means letting them be angry. Letting them process their pain without being labeled “difficult.” When we pressure kids to move on without making space for their anger or shut-down moments, we’re not helping them heal; we’re teaching them to suppress.  And feelings that don’t get processed don’t just disappear. They leak out later; in behavior, in relationships and in silence that gets louder over time.  

 

  1. Connection isn’t a reward. 

Connection isn’t the prize they earn for good behavior.  It’s the foundation that makes healing possible.  When the nervous system is in survival mode, it’s not “defiance”.  The body is doing what the body has learned to do to stay safe. You don’t power through that with rules and compliance charts. You break through it with relationship.   A teenager who trusts no one won’t build skills until they trust you because no tool matters if the person holding it can’t be trusted.  

 

If we really want to raise resilient kids then we need to stop treating resilience like an inherent personality trait and start calling it what it is: the outcome of consistent, connected care.

 

It doesn’t come from grit. It doesn’t come from gratitude.
It comes from believing that you’re safe.
It’s knowing that you can fall apart and still be loved. That you can fail and still be worth fighting for.

If you work with kids, don’t underestimate what your consistency means. You don’t have to fix them. You just have to STAY.  

THAT’S what changes everything.

And it’s the only thing that ever really has.

 

Tiffani Dhooge, President & CEO of Children’s Harbor, a nationally recognized child welfare organization, dedicated to serving teenagers in and aging out of foster care.  With over 27 years of experience and a track record of building programs that challenge broken systems, Tiffani leads with one core belief: connection is the foundation of resilience. She’s also the creator and host of This is NOW: Parenting Teens Today, a podcast that offers honest conversations, expert insights, and just enough humor to help parents navigate the chaos of raising teenagers without losing their minds.

You need to be a member of The Coastal Star to add comments!

Join The Coastal Star

Votes: 0
Email me when people reply –