The piece is an opinion essay grounded in the author’s clinical experience and spiritual reflection; it cites no peer-reviewed studies. Nevertheless, its themes align with research showing that (a) acceptance-based interventions improve well-being, and (b) prosocial action boosts happiness.
Life invariably brings hardship. Performance psychologist Ben Bernstein argues that flourishing begins when we stop fighting reality (“accept”), use setbacks as raw material for personal development (“grow”), and channel our hard-won strength toward helping others (“serve”). Acceptance is not resignation; it is the decision to meet circumstances as they are, which frees mental energy for growth. Growth then requires loosening our grip on rigid wants and fears so we can learn from difficulty and reshape our character. The final stage, service, turns private progress into public good, giving experience its fullest meaning.
Bernstein illustrates each step with everyday stories (a mother confronting her son’s cancer, a CEO re-thinking company culture, a student determined to mentor peers) and with historical examples such as Viktor Frankl and Helen Keller. His core message: we are “gardeners” meant to cultivate ourselves so the wider community can bloom.
Accept: Meet reality first
Flourishing begins when we stop fighting what is happening and face it head-on. Acceptance is not approval or resignation – it is the moment we drop the “Why me?” story and ask, “What can I learn here?” This shift frees emotional energy and allows clearer, wiser action.
Grow: Turn experience into development
Once reality is accepted, the discomfort it brings can stretch us. Growth means loosening our grip on rigid wants (attachment) and fears (aversion) so we can let adversity reshape our habits, values, and vision. Like a muscle that strengthens after stress, character deepens when we work with, not against, difficulty.
Serve: Let your growth benefit others
Personal progress finds its full meaning when it is offered back to the world. Whether mentoring a student, transforming a workplace, or volunteering in the community, channeling hard-won lessons into service completes the cycle of optimal living and connects us to something larger than ourselves.
Prosocial Behavior and Well-Being: An Empirical Review of the Role of Basic Psychological Need Satisfaction* (Chen, 2024). Epub February 15, 2024.
A review of 19 studies concludes that helping others reliably enhances well-being, especially when it also satisfies the fundamental needs for autonomy, competence, and relatedness.
Exploring the Effects of Volunteering on the Social, Mental, and Physical Health and Well-being of Volunteers: An Umbrella Review (Nichol et al., 2023).
Synthesising 28 systematic reviews, this umbrella review finds that regular volunteering is linked to lower mortality, better functioning, and improved mental health, highlighting service to others as a robust path to thriving.
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