"You are perfect exactly as you are."
J.E. Mara
Today's article is all about Self-love. I tend to write up this topic simply because I inclined myself to pay more attention seeking myself for betterment and look forward for a good life ahead.
Personally, I realized that we can be the most amazing human being in the world
and everyone sees rays of light, love and genius when they look at
you, but if you yourself don’t know it, all of that external
admiration doesn’t matter one bit. I know because I used to
look at people who were successful and happy, and wonder, “What’s
their secret? Why can’t I be that way?”
After a long struggle of dealing with failures,
immaturity, rejections and even self-loathing, I educated myself and came to realize
that the reason I couldn’t be happy like the people I envied and admired was
that I didn’t love myself the way they loved themselves. Perhaps, this is also we all feel.
For me, shifting from self-loathing to self-love has
been profoundly healing. Now I see happy, successful people and
I smile, knowing that their lives are products of a series of
decisions that support their well-being.
Truth be told, every second you spend doubting your
worth, and every moment you use to criticize yourself, is a tragic
loss – a fresh moment of your life thrown away. And it’s
not like you have forever either, so don’t waste any more of your
seconds; don’t throw even one more of your moments away.
Today is the best day to start loving yourself.
Here are personal reminders and tips I've came up
for self-loving people do differently:
They tell themselves they’re good enough.
This might seem overly
simplistic, but it’s absolutely vital. Tell yourself, “I am
ENOUGH!” anytime you begin to feel like your aren’t.
Because sometimes the hardest part of the journey is simply believing
you’re worthy of the trip. And you are! Accept your
flaws. Admit your mistakes. Don’t hide and don’t
lie. Deal with your truth and grow stronger from it.
Your
truth won’t penalize you. You are always good enough just the
way you are, to grow stronger than you ever have been before.
The mistakes you make along the way won’t hurt you. The
denial and cover-up will. Flawed people are beautiful, likeable
and teachable. Fakes and phonies are not.
You are YOU for a reason. Ignore the
distractions. Listen to your own inner voice. Mind your
own business. Keep your best wishes and your biggest goals
close to your heart and dedicate time to them every day. Don’t
be scared to walk alone, and don’t be scared to love it.
Never let anyone’s ignorance, drama or negativity derail you from
your truth, and from loving who you are.
They believe they’re capable of overcoming the challenges they face.
Great challenges make life interesting; overcoming
them makes life meaningful. Self-loving people know this and
live accordingly. It’s how you deal with life’s challenges
that determines your level of success and happiness. Laugh at
your mistakes and learn from them. Joke about your troubles and
gather strength from them. Have fun with the challenges you
face and then conquer them.
Will doing so always feel comfortable?
Absolutely not. But will it be worth it? You bet ya!
Emotional discomfort in life, when accepted, rises, crests and
crashes in a series of waves. Each wave washes an old layer of
you away and deposits treasures you never expected to find.
Out
goes inexperience, in comes awareness; out goes frustration, in comes
resilience; out goes hatred, in comes kindness. No one would
say these waves of emotional experience are easy to ride, but the
rhythm of emotional discomfort that you learn to tolerate while doing
so is natural, helpful and necessary.
When something negative happens, self-loving people
will look for a way to take responsibility, rather than searching for
someone to point a finger at. They know that placing
responsibility and blame elsewhere doesn’t solve the problem – it
only stirs anxiety and helplessness.
By choosing to take full
responsibility, self-loving people do themselves the favor of
encouraging positive change and acceptance rather than stewing in
sorrow and stagnation.
Remember this:
You are the only person responsible for your success
and happiness. The best part of your life will start on the day
you decide your life is your own – no one to lean on, rely on, or
blame. You are in full control of your present life.
Believe with all your heart that you can do what you were made to
do. It may be tough at times, but refuse to follow some
preordained path or look to everyone else for permission. Make
your own rules and have your own game plan. There is no
happiness and success to be found by playing it safe and settling for
a life that is less than the one you are capable of living.
They educate themselves.
As Mahatma Gandhi once said, “Live as if you were
to die tomorrow. Learn as if you were to live forever.”
Life is a book and those who do not educate themselves read only a
few pages. When you know better, you live better and feel
better about yourself. Self-loving people are keyed into this.
And they know that all education is self-education. It doesn’t
matter if you’re sitting in a college classroom or a coffee shop.
We don’t learn anything we don’t want to learn. Those who
take the time and initiative to pursue knowledge on their own time
are the only ones who earn a real education in this world.
Take a look at any widely acclaimed scholar,
entrepreneur, artist or historical figure you can think of.
Formal education or not, you’ll find that he or she is a product of
continuous self-education – investing copious amounts of time and
energy to improve oneself – which, for obvious reasons, is one of
the highest forms of self-love.
They feed their passions and talents.
If your life is going to mean anything, you have to
live it yourself. You have to choose the path that feels right
to YOU, not the one that looks right to everyone else. Every
person in this world feels the gentle tug of fascination toward some
idea or activity. And sometimes that tug isn’t so gentle.
Self-loving people recognize and respect their inner
longings as something important, and they devote their time and
energy to nourishing those desires.
They know that nourishing
their inner hunger is much more important than any fears they might
have about what feeding it looks like to others.
So my challenge to you is this: Live your life not
as a bystander. Live in this world, on this day, and everyday
hereafter as an active participant. Every morning, ask yourself
what is really important to you, and then find the courage, wisdom
and willpower to build your day around your answer.
They teach people how to treat them right.
Not everyone will appreciate what you do for them.
You have to figure out who’s worth your attention and who’s just
taking advantage of you.
If your time and energy is misspent on
the wrong relationships, you can end up in a tedious cycle of
fleeting friendships, superficial romances that are as thrilling as
they are meaningless, and a general sense of wondering why you always
seem to be running in place chasing affection.
That’s why self-loving people approach
relationships from a place of self-respect and self-sufficiency.
They don’t expect everyone to like them and they don’t need
everyone to. They know what they need to feel loved and
respected and they know what they have to offer others.
So they
gently teach the people around them about their boundaries and, if
these boundaries are crossed repeatedly, they have enough sense to
walk the other way.
They uphold their standards.
What’s dreadful is to pretend that second-rate is
first-rate. To pretend that you don’t need love and respect
when you do. To lie to yourself and say that everything is OK
when it isn’t. Or to convince yourself that you like your
work when you know darn well you’re capable of much better.
Bottom line: Love yourself enough to never lower
your standards for the wrong reasons. It’s about living
honorably. It’s about doing the right thing, no matter what,
even when nobody’s going to know whether you did it or not.
At the end of the day, your reputation is what other people know
about you. Your honor is what you know about yourself.
They are present and engaged in the only moment ever guaranteed to them.
Self-loving people value themselves and therefore
they value how they spend their time. They realize that the
only moment they ever truly have is the present moment, so they
occupy it fully.
Distractions are in the palms of our hands these
days, but we need to remember to look up more often. We need to
learn to be more human again. Don’t avoid eye contact.
Don’t hide behind gadgets. Smile often. Ask about
people’s stories. Listen. So much is lost when we
don’t.
The inability to focus in the present leads to a
lack of awareness, which can lead to major challenges in
communication, and therefore trouble in our most important
relationships.
You can’t connect with anyone, including
yourself, unless you are fully engaged. And you can’t be
fully engaged when you’re Facebooking or Tweeting your life
away on your phone. You just can’t. If you are
constantly attached to your phone and only listening with your ears
as your eyes check for the next social update, you are ripping
yourself off of actually experiencing real relationships and real
life. The same is true for texting too. Yes, a missed
MEMORY is worse than a missed TEXT!
They share their abundance.
Self-loving people don’t need to have it all, or
even much at all, to feel wealthy enough to share with others.
They know they have it good in some way or another, and they aren’t
scared to share it.
Maybe you’re feeling a little down and out right
now. Maybe money is tight. But I bet if you think long
and hard about it, you have some kind of abundance that you could
share right now with someone else.
Perhaps you have an
abundance of patience, so you could be a listening ear. Perhaps
you have an abundance of knowledge on a particular niche topic that
you could share. Or maybe you have an abundance of strength
compared to your elderly neighbor, so you could carry her groceries
up the front steps for her.
Even an abundance of smiles can go
a long way in brightening the day of others along your path.
And as you know, life is a circle. What goes
around eventually comes back around.
They don’t beat themselves up over the uncontrollable.
Self-loving people know there are times in our lives
when we’re meant to sit, stuck in the muck, and fester for a little
while.
When we need to feel the ache of uncertainty deep in our
hearts and minds so that, ultimately, we learn how to surrender to
the fact that as much as we might try to plan and control and force
an outcome, some things in life don’t happen until they are ready
to happen.
And sometimes the good things happening end too
soon. But again, self-loving people don’t fight it.
They know these endings are the perfect time for self-reflection that
can lead to self-renewal, gratitude for our experiences, and a solid
start to new chapters of our lives.
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