Self Love As A Practice
Self acceptance, self esteem, and self
compassion can get us through painful times in our lives, help us to bounce
back from failure, teach us to love others better, and help us reach our goals.
For many of us, however, self love isn’t
a given. We haven’t all learned to hold ourselves with kindness in the wild,
unpredictable world. So how do we show up to self love?
Just like anything else, we practice.
When we do yoga or meditation, the major
thing we are doing is paying attention. We show up to what’s actually
happening. Rather than trying to fix, analyze, or criticize what arises, we
practice catching it as if with an open hand: holding without holding on.
The yoga practice isn’t about getting into
a certain posture or improving your physical abilities, though that’s an aspect
of it for many people. In a lifelong yoga practice, what we learn to do is
observe what happens in our minds when we don’t get into a certain pose, or
when we show up to our mats with pain and limitation. How do we talk to
ourselves in those moments?
It can often feel, further, that we have
very little control over the thoughts pinging around in our minds. The internal
logic of that mean little voice in our heads that tells us we are not good
enough doesn’t always respond to reason. It’s pretty hard to choose our
thoughts.
We can, however, choose our actions. When
we get better at being mindful, we can show up to what we feel, what we might
need, and the different options we have available. When we find ourselves
struggling in a yoga posture, gritting our teeth to try to prove to ourselves
that we can do it, what if we pause and ask ourselves, “But is this kind?”
Choosing to stop and take child’s pose teaches the body that we deserve to
rest. That it’s okay to slow down. Pauses are loving.
I’ll never forget the words of a
participant in a course I was taking on mental health practices. She said, “I
may not always believe I deserve love, but I can behave as if I do.”
It’s challenging to change our thoughts
or our emotions, but it is a little bit easier to choose our actions. When the
mean thoughts start shouting in our heads, we can notice them and decide to
take a walk outside or have a warm shower. As we take actions of kindness
towards ourselves, behaving as if we loved ourselves unconditionally, we are
sending messages to our subconscious minds that we do actually love ourselves,
that we deserve the kindness we are experiencing.
The mindfulness we practice in yoga or
meditation helps us to recognize when the voices in our heads are getting
cruel. When we learn to practice this in our day to day lives, we can start to
see when we are being hard on ourselves and create more opportunities to extend
kindness to ourselves. We can catch the emotional spiral before it spins us
down the drain and gives us a chance to ask, “wait, have I eaten today? Do I
need a nap?” As we slowly learn how to love ourselves better, we start to
expect others to treat us with kindness as well. We start to realize that of
course we love ourselves. Of course we deserve love.
Self love, for most of us, isn’t innate.
It’s a practice. We can start right now.
Source:spiritualityhealth
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