Maxable Resilience Framework (M-RF)
Overview
The Maxable Resilience Framework (M-RF) is a structured, human-centred model designed to support individuals and organisations in building practical psychological resilience.
It focuses on developing everyday skills that help people manage pressure, understand their internal responses, think more clearly, and stay connected to purpose and support. The framework is preventative, non-clinical, and skills-based, making it suitable for use across workplaces, educational settings, and community initiatives.
The M-RF translates established psychological principles into accessible, real-world capacities that can be applied in daily life — particularly in environments shaped by change, stress, and increasing emotional demands.
The Core Structure of the Framework
At the heart of the Maxable Resilience Framework are four interconnected capacities that work in sequence:
Regulate → Reflect → Reframe → Reconnect.
Together, these capacities support movement from emotional overload to clarity, adaptability, and meaningful connection.

REGULATE
REGULATE — Stabilising the inner state
Resilience begins with regulation. When pressure increases, individuals may experience emotional reactivity, overwhelm, or shutdown. Regulation supports the ability to pause and stabilise before responding.
This pillar focuses on helping individuals:
- Recognise early signs of stress or overload
- Reduce emotional intensity
- Regain a sense of internal steadiness
- Create space between stimulus and response
Why this matters:
Without regulation, reflection and decision-making become difficult. Regulation restores a sense of control and psychological safety.

REFLECT
REFLECT — Understanding inner experience
Reflection builds awareness of thoughts, emotions, and patterns that influence behaviour. Many people experience reactions without understanding what drives them.
This pillar supports individuals to:
- Notice emotional and behavioural patterns
- Identify triggers and influences
- Distinguish facts from interpretations
- Develop emotional awareness and language
Why this matters:
Self-awareness strengthens communication, insight, and more intentional decision-making.

REFRAME
REFRAME — Developing flexible and balanced perspectives
Under stress, thinking can become rigid or unhelpfully negative. Reframing strengthens the ability to view situations from alternative, more balanced perspectives.
This pillar supports individuals to:
- Challenge unhelpful interpretations
- Reduce self-critical or catastrophic thinking
- Broaden perspective
- Respond more deliberately rather than react automatically
Why this matters:
Cognitive flexibility supports adaptability, problem-solving, and resilience in the face of uncertainty.

RECONNECT
RECONNECT — Strengthening connection, meaning, and support
Resilience is sustained through connection — with others, with purpose, and with personal values.
This pillar supports individuals to:
- Strengthen supportive relationships
- Reduce isolation
- Reconnect with values and identity
- Rebuild motivation and meaning
Why this matters:
Connection acts as a protective factor against stress, burnout, and disengagement, supporting long-term wellbeing.
How the Framework Works
The Maxable Resilience Framework follows a purposeful sequence:
Regulate → Reflect → Reframe → Reconnect
Each stage builds on the one before it.
Regulation enables reflection;
Reflection enables reframing;
Reframing supports reconnection.
Together, they form a practical pathway from emotional overload toward clarity, adaptability, and constructive action.
The framework does not aim to diagnose or treat mental health conditions. Instead, it focuses on strengthening everyday psychological skills that support wellbeing, functioning, and resilience across different life contexts.
Psychological Foundations
Emotional regulation research
Metacognition and self-awareness
Social connection and attachment research
Cognitive and behavioural psychology
Positive psychology
Where the Maxable Resilience Framework Is Applied
- workplace wellbeing and resilience initiatives
- universities, colleges, and educational programmes
- men’s mental health initiatives
- youth and community wellbeing projects
- talks, workshops, and structured learning sessions



Where the Maxable Resilience Framework Is Applied
Build emotional stability
Improve self-awareness
Think flexibly under pressure
Increase communication and relationships
Make more grounded decisions
By focusing on capability rather than pathology, the framework supports healthier functioning at both individual and organisational levels.



Why the Maxable Resilience Framework Matters
- build emotional stability
- improve self-awareness
- think more flexibly under pressure
- strengthen communication and relationships
- make more grounded decisions
How the Framework Works
The Maxable Resilience Framework follows a purposeful sequence:
Regulate → Reflect → Reframe → Reconnect
Each stage builds on the one before it.
Regulation enables reflection;
Reflection enables reframing;
Reframing supports reconnection.
Together, they form a practical pathway from emotional overload toward clarity, adaptability, and constructive action.
The framework does not aim to diagnose or treat mental health conditions. Instead, it focuses on strengthening everyday psychological skills that support wellbeing, functioning, and resilience across different life contexts.
Working With the Framework
- facilitated training sessions
- keynote talks
- organisational and community programmes
- tailored resilience initiatives


