Cultivating Greater Self-Love and Acceptance *

Can you be your own worst critic? Is loving and accepting yourself contingent on changing all the things you don’t like about yourself?

“The most terrifying thing is to accept oneself completely.” – C.G. Jung

In Emotional Freedom Techniques (EFT, or tapping), the standard setup sentence is a variation on “even though I have [_____ fill in the issue you are working on], I deeply and completely love and accept myself.” For many of us, however, the idea of loving ourselves as we are seems like science fiction.  This may due to a history of receiving praise or rewards for good behavior or achievement, and of getting negative feedback/punishment for misbehavior or under-achieving. We may also have learned that loving ourselves was tantamount to arrogance.

In the healing world and spiritual realms, however, it has become accepted wisdom that whatever we resist persists, and that the gateway to change is actually being able to accept ourselves as we are. Easier said than done, for many of us.

The following are 8 tips for cultivating greater self-love and acceptance.

Note: For some people, the word love itself is a loaded term. Clients sometimes say: “I don’t even know what the word love means!” If that is the case for you, you can replace the word love with acceptance, empathy, or any other word that resonates with you.

# 1 Notice your self-judgments

For the duration of this article, I invite you to take off the hat of self-critic, and put on your curious explorer hat. Imagine that you are an anthropologist newly arrived in the land of You, who is wanting to understand what makes you tick. With that perspective in mind, I invite you to start noticing what gets in your way of accepting yourself. Are there specific themes or patterns to your self-judgment? For example, does your self-critic get activated about your appearance, your performance, your articulateness, an addictive habit, your productivity, your ability to socialize with others? Do you ruminate about the past, or compare yourself to others?  

I recommend keeping a daily judgment journal for a week. Either as you go or at the end of the day, jot down the thoughts and self-criticisms you noticed coming up during the day, or any way you felt disappointed in yourself. If self-judgment is not the main obstacle to loving yourself (but rather an addictive behavior, being too other-focused, and so on), track that instead.

#2 Notice the impact on your body and emotions

Now that you have a sense of what your judgment patterns are, start noticing what happens in your body when you judge yourself. Do certain areas of your body contract? Are those habitual areas of holding for you? What emotions arise when you are hard on yourself? Do you feel shame, frustration, helplessness, anger, overwhelm, defensiveness and so on? Do you want to check out? After a few days of tracking your judgments, start adding the physical and emotional impact of your self-criticism in your judgment journal.

#3 Acknowledge your patterns for trying to help you

Ask yourself what your judgment is trying to achieve for you? Is it wanting to motivate you to do better? Get you to change a negative pattern of behavior? Do better than those around you? Prevent you from experiencing failure by keeping you from trying?

Send gratitude to your judgment and self-critic for what they are trying to achieve for you. And then ask yourself how well it’s been working for you. Does judging yourself actually motivate you to work harder, or does it just lead to feeling bad about yourself and wanting to give up? And is there another way to meet the same need that might be more effective?

#4 Trace the pattern to its roots

After a week of keeping your journal, start feeling into the beliefs about yourself that might be underlying your judgments. For example: “I always mess things up,” “no matter how hard I try it’s never enough,” “it’s OK for others but not for me.” Start noticing if the belief feels familiar. Ask yourself: “if there was an age when I first started believing this, what age (or time frame) might that be?” And see if any number or memory pops up. If not, do not worry about it, you can just stay with the belief itself. Otherwise, start feeling into what was happening at the time, or who you might have gotten that belief from. Whose voice or judgments (either about you or themselves, or both) might you have internalized?

#5 Send yourself compassion and forgiveness

Now that you have identified where some of your patterns come from, see if you are able to give yourself compassion for the messages you might have received about yourself. If you aren’t able to have compassion for your current self, try sending empathy to your younger self. At the same time, begin to open to the possibility of forgiving yourself for having absorbed these messages. If you have regret over the past, things you did or didn’t do, see if you can forgive yourself for that, too. Realizing that when you withhold love from yourself, you are likely to perpetuate the mistakes you are beating yourself for. Remember that accepting yourself doesn’t mean giving up or resigning to an unwanted fate. It just means that you are no longer fighting with what is. In fact, it is often only when we are truly able to be love ourselves unconditionally that old stuck patterns begin to shift, because it was conditionally of love that made us develop the coping strategies in the first place.

#6 Start welcoming the parts that have been rejected

As you begin to give yourself compassion, begin to feel into the possibility of accepting even the parts of you that seem unacceptable. Most of us make self-acceptance conditional on living up to our expectations of ourselves, which means that we split off from parts of ourselves that feel unworthy of love. However, those neglected or hidden parts often manifest as our shadow or self-sabotage patterns, trying to get our attention. The more we are able to embrace all of ourselves, including the parts we are less than proud off, the more likely we are to feel whole and integrated.

Feel into the parts of yourself you have been judging. It may be your fear, your vulnerability, your anger… Or it may be the part of you that shuts down and goes into overwhelm, or the part that wants to check out and distract. And see if you can start welcoming that part in. If it helps, perhaps put a hand on your body where it felt tight earlier. And give that part reassurance. For example “it’s ok. I’m here. Even though I’ve been angry at you, I’m open to accepting you are here.” Or whatever feels genuine to you.

#7 Honor your strengths

Our minds are conditioned to focus on the negative. In order to begin shifting your perspective, I invite you to start making a list of your strengths. Transform your judgment journal into a gratitude and celebration journal. Every day, write down something about yourself that you want to honor, and/or that you are grateful for.

#8 Connect to your future self

If accepting and loving yourself as you are still feels elusive (and even if it doesn’t), I invite you to call in a future self who is at peace with themselves. You may get an image of them, or just a felt sense. Imagine that you are approaching this version of you, and letting them know that you are struggling with accepting yourself as you are. Ask for any message or advice they may have for you to get to where they already are. You may also ask for their support in helping you heal any remaining limiting belief or outdated coping strategy that may be getting in your way. If it feels accessible, imagine you are merging with this version of you. How does it feel in your body to accept yourself? How are you living your life? Feel this in every cell of your body. Feel yourself embodying this version of yourself every day for 21 days, and by the end of that time you are likely to feel more at peace with yourself. 

“Once we believe in ourselves, we can risk curiosity, wonder, spontaneous delight, or any experience that reveals the human spirit” – E.E. Cummings

© Jenny Brav

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Cultivating Greater Self-Love and Acceptance *2024-04-02T12:24:31+00:00

Your Existence is NOT on Trial *

Do you find yourself constantly trying to prove your worth? Do you fear judgement, and take others’ comments very personally?

“Don’t let the expectations and opinions of other people affect your decisions. It’s your life, not theirs. Do what matters most to you; do what makes you feel alive and happy.” – Roy T. Bennett

“You’ll never know who you are unless you shed who you pretend to be.” – Vironika Tugaleva

Many of us live life probationally. As though our very existence were on trial, and we have to prove our worth in order to get to stay. To this end, we may expend much of our energy trying to do the “right” thing and to please others so we get validation that it’s okay we’re here. Or we strive to check societally endorsed boxes of success (unfortunately, nothing is ever enough). Conversely, we may be guarded, bracing for the judgment that we’re sure is about to come. Constantly on the defensive, gathering rebuttals and justifications to counter any incriminating evidence that we fear will come our way.

There are plenty of valid reasons for this. As children, many of us learned through the parenting we received and/or the educational system we went through that our value would be measured by our performance and/or behavior. As such, we disconnected from our inherent sense of worth, and learned to change or temper some parts of ourselves to get approval or avoid punishment. Additionally, many of us have histories of persecution due to gender, race, religious beliefs, class, ethnicity, sexual orientation (and so forth) somewhere in our lineage. These actual lived experiences of being shunned often get passed on in our genetic makeup and responses to life.

However, when our strategies aren’t updated to match our current circumstances, this defensive/apologetic stance makes it difficult to live a full and authentic life. It might be helpful to look at these tips for clearing childhood wounds and releasing ancestral baggage.

Once you have, here are four reminders to help you release this probationary approach to life.

  1. Your worth is unconditional

Although this might not be the message you received, the truth is that your worth is inherent. Not dependent on anything external. This is the universal truth that applies to all living beings. You are here not to make up for your existence, but to be grateful for it. To shine as brightly as you wish to, all your gifts in evidence.

  1. You’re here to take up space

You may have learned you need to hide to be safe. And if that’s the case, you can give that scared young part of you love and compassion, and take things slowly. Also, let that part know that your circumstances have changed. It is now not only safe, it’s actually safer than hiding, which is now causing you pain and distress. Because you’re here to be visible. To take up space. You don’t see trees in the forest huddling in the background, trying to make themselves scarce.

  1. You’re here to be YOU

A common strategy to survive our families, authority figures, and/or our peer group is to try to adapt to whatever we perceive as the majority or accepted way to be in order to fit in. However, if you’re not you, who will be?

If all the flowers in the world were the same, how boring would that be? We are all born with our own unique flavor of being, that we are meant to shine and thrive with. We are not meant to mimic everyone else, or play by cookie-cutter rules.

  1. The only expert on your life is you

Others may have opinions on how you live your life, your job, your clothes, your romantic partners and so on. But remember, other people’s judgments reflect on them (their values, beliefs, wounding, triggers etc.), not on you. The only person whose opinion matters is your own. Which isn’t to say you can’t honor or listen to others. But you have the final say.

Learn to listen to and trust your inner guidance, for it will lead you where you need to go. And if/when you feel stuck, and/or doubt creeps in, know that that’s just a scared young part needing reassurance. Pause, send love to the fear, and let that part know that it’s okay to be scared. It’s safe now. And wait until the doubt clears, or at least quiets, to take the next steps.

***

Next time you notice you’re making yourself small, getting defensive, stifling your voice to please others, judging yourself or others, I invite you to stop. And remind yourself:

“My life is NOT on trial. I have full permission to exist and take up space. Why else would I be here?”

 

 

Your Existence is NOT on Trial *2022-10-11T11:06:54+00:00
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